Test Bank For
Legal Medicine, 8th Edition
Health Care Law and Medical Ethics
,Chapter 1 — History of Legal Medicine
from Legal Medicine, 8th Edition (American College of Legal Medicine & American Board
of Legal Medicine)
1. A state board of medicine is reviewing the evolution of forensic practice. Which
historical development most significantly contributed to the formal emergence of legal
medicine as a discipline?
A. The establishment of hospital accreditation standards
B. The shift from lay juries to professional juries
C. The rise of scientific methods applied to legal questions
D. The abolition of coroners in major cities
Answer: C
Rationale: Legal medicine emerged as scientific principles—particularly pathology,
toxicology, and forensic science—were applied to legal questions, establishing a formal
discipline grounded in empirical evidence.
2. A nursing graduate is studying early legal-medical systems. Which ancient civilization is
credited with one of the earliest documented uses of forensic medical investigation?
A. Roman
B. Chinese
C. Greek
D. Babylonian
Answer: B
Rationale: Ancient China (notably the 13th-century text Hsi Yuan Lu) documented early
forensic techniques, including death investigation, marking one of the earliest formal uses
of legal medicine.
3. A clinician preparing courtroom testimony wonders why medical testimony became more
accepted in Western courts in the 19th century. Which reason best explains this shift?
A. Religious authorities mandated expert testimony
B. Expansion of medical licensing and professionalization
C. Judges refused to hear nonmedical witnesses
D. Medical malpractice was abolished, requiring new testimony types
Answer: B
Rationale: As medicine became a recognized profession with standardized education,
courts increasingly accepted physicians as experts.
4. A healthcare provider is asked about the history of medicolegal death investigation in the
U.S. Which statement is accurate?
A. The coroner system originated in the U.S. after World War II
B. The coroner system was imported from English common law
C. The U.S. rejected coroner systems in favor of medical examiner systems in the 1800s
D. Coroners always had to be physicians
Answer: B
Rationale: The coroner system is an English common-law import, originally a financial
officer, not necessarily a physician.
5. A medical examiner trainee reviews the roots of forensic pathology. Which event most
strongly shaped modern forensic pathology in the U.S.?
A. The founding of the WHO
, B. The introduction of standardized autopsy protocols
C. Elimination of county coroners
D. Advances in nursing accountability law
Answer: B
Rationale: Standardized autopsy protocols and pathology training formalized forensic
pathology as a specialty.
6. A nurse working in risk management is reviewing the early development of malpractice
law. Which factor historically contributed to the expansion of medical malpractice
litigation?
A. Decline in scientific medicine
B. Increased public trust in physicians
C. Growth in professional standards and expectations
D. Elimination of physician licensing exams
Answer: C
Rationale: As medicine became more standardized and expectations rose, deviations
from accepted practice were more frequently litigated.
7. A hospital ethics committee is reviewing the origins of informed consent. Which
historical milestone contributed most to informed-consent doctrine?
A. The advent of genetic testing
B. Nuremberg Code post–World War II
C. Development of HIPAA
D. Widespread use of anesthesia
Answer: B
Rationale: The Nuremberg Code established essential principles for voluntary consent in
medical research.
8. A nurse teaching about public health law mentions quarantine authorities. Which
historical event most influenced early public-health legal powers?
A. The Black Death in Europe
B. The discovery of penicillin
C. The creation of Medicare
D. The development of antiseptic surgery
Answer: A
Rationale: The Black Death led to formal legal authority for isolation and quarantine,
foundational public-health powers.
9. A provider asks how the legal system began relying on expert witnesses. Which historical
shift allowed physicians to testify more frequently in court?
A. Abolition of common-law courts
B. Recognition of scientific authority
C. The decline of universities
D. Criminalization of surgical practice
Answer: B
Rationale: Courts increasingly valued scientific expertise, leading to more reliance on
medical expert testimony.
10. A medical student is learning about the origin of toxicology. Which pioneer is most
associated with establishing forensic toxicology?
A. Vesalius
, B. Orfila
C. Jenner
D. Ehrlich
Answer: B
Rationale: Mathieu Orfila is regarded as the founder of modern forensic toxicology.
11. During a training, a nurse asks why autopsies became key legal tools in the 19th century.
The most accurate response is:
A. They replaced medical records
B. They provided objective scientific evidence in legal cases
C. They reduced malpractice insurance costs
D. They were mandatory for all deaths
Answer: B
Rationale: Autopsies allowed objective determination of cause of death, strengthening
legal investigation.
12. A provider preparing for expert-witness testimony wonders how medical licensing
contributed to legal medicine. Which is correct?
A. Licensing reduced the need for medicolegal testimony
B. Licensing established minimum standards that courts could reference
C. Licensing increased jury involvement
D. Licensing made malpractice suits impossible
Answer: B
Rationale: Licensing formalized professional standards, giving courts benchmarks for
evaluating care.
13. A nurse reviewing the evolution of forensic principles asks which historical trend most
shaped modern medical examiner systems.
A. Rise of unhealthy workplaces
B. Growth of laboratory diagnostics
C. Migration of physicians to rural areas
D. Decline of insurance companies
Answer: B
Rationale: Laboratory-based diagnostics strengthened scientific death investigation,
favoring physician-led ME systems.
14. A student asks how early legal medicine influenced modern ethics. Which historical
factor is foundational?
A. Expansion of privatized healthcare
B. Increasing emphasis on professional responsibility
C. Rise of herbal medicine
D. Abolition of patient autonomy
Answer: B
Rationale: Legal medicine historically required physicians to act responsibly and
ethically—principles that shaped modern ethics.
15. A nurse participating in sentinel-event review learns that systematic record-keeping
emerged from early medicolegal investigations. Why was this significant?
A. It minimized government oversight
B. It provided factual data for legal scrutiny
C. It eliminated physician testimony