Title: Dead Bodies and Disasters: Principles of Mortuary Services
1Dead Bodies and Disasters Principles of Mortuary
Services
- Amado Alejandro Baez MD MSc EMT-P
- Brigham and Womens Hospital / Harvard Medical
School - aabaez_at_partners.org
- Senior Advisor National Directorate of
Emergencies and Disasters - Dominican Republic State Secretary of Public
Health and Social Assistance
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3"We were working for the living, and now we are
working for the dead and the living," "It's
pretty tough, pulling out dead bodies." A
Louisiana State Medical officer referring to the
devastating aftermath of the August 2005
hurricane Katrina
4Objectives
- At the end of this lecture the participant will
be able to - Understand the basic principles of the management
of dead bodies in disasters. - Review important epidemiological issues related
to mass dead bodies. - Understand principles of cadaver identification.
- Review techniques of dead body disposal in
disasters.
5Cadaver Recuperation Process
Coordination and Communication
6Equipment for mortuary services in major disasters
- Stainless steel postmortem tables covered with
plastic - Wheeled trolleys for transportation within the
mortuary. - Plastic sheeting for the floor.
- Heavy-duty black plastic sheeting for temporary
screens. - Refuse bins and bags.
- Cleaning materials mops, buckets, cloths, soap,
towels. - Disinfectant and deodorizer.
- Protective clothing and heavy-duty rubber gloves.
- Translucent plastic body bags 0.1 mm thick and
labels. - Wall charts to record progress or large poster
boards if there are no walls.
7Coordination Support
8Body Recovery
- Initial element in the cadaver management
process. - Can be initially chaotic and extremely
distressful. - Need to involve search and rescue groups.
- Need for tagging bodies (name location etc..) to
allow further identification. - Equipment can be diverse
- Basic usually in the initial phase
- Volunteers, wheel barrels
- Advanced after improved resources
- Trucks, planes buses
9Storage and Body Preservation
10Storage Issues
- Without proper storage, bodies may began to
decompose early depending on environmental
temperature. - Storage Options
- Refrigeration
- Ice and Dry ice
- Temporary burial
11Body preservation measures
- Body preservation measures are required on
arrival. - Anticipate need for refrigerated holding areas.
- Mobile or portable refrigeration units
(refrigerated containers or trucks) - The morgues refrigeration capacity will most
likely be exceeded during a disaster. - Keep refrigerated trucks close to holding site.
- Need for use of other preservative measures
- Calcium hydroxide, formol and zeolite
12Identification of Bodies
13Methods of Identification
- Personal effects
- Identity cards
- Rings, necklaces
- Telephone memory cards
- Location of body.
- Internet sites.
- Message boards with photos of missing.
- Red Cross.
14Viewing and photographing
- Should be arranged quickly.
- Decomposition may be too advanced after 24-48hrs
- Arranged locally when possible.
- Logistically very difficult .
- Distressing for relatives.
- Photographs face body.
- Soon after death
- Possibly the best postmortem information
available in mass fatality incident
15Disaster Forensic Methods
- Standard methods
- Dental analysis
- Limited by
- Lack of comparison elements
- Availability of resources
- DNA techniques
- Limited by costs and availability of expertise
and resources
16DNA analysis
- Consideration of established techniques.
- Choice of most informative and valid technique.
- Application of analysis techniques for DNA
according to necessity and availability of each
sample. - Need for reference materials and conclusive
samples.
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19Identification of bodies Key Points
- Records of deaths kept to monitor mortality rates
and the incidence of disease. - Displaying bodies for identification requires
space - 1000 bodies require over 2000m2.
- When possible avoid relatives viewing many
bodies. - Separate location for identification and
grieving. - Once identified, a death certificate should be
issued and body tagged. - With violent deaths, record the cause of death
for possible future investigation.
20There is no evidence that, following a natural
disaster, dead bodies pose a risk of epidemics.
Epidemic-causing acute diseases are unlikely to
be more common among disaster victims than among
the general population, suggesting that the risk
to the general public is negligible
21Categories and examples of infectious hazards
associated with cadavers after a natural disaster
- Gastrointestinal
- Rotavirus diarrhea
- Campylobacter enteritis
- Salmonellosis
- Enteric fevers (typhoid and paratyphoid)
- Escherichia coli
- Hepatitis A
- Shigellosis
- Cholera
- Bloodborne
- Hepatitis B
- Hepatitis C
- HIV
- Respiratory
- Tuberculosis
22Burial Services
- Burial is the preferred method of body disposal.
- Attention to ground conditions.
- Groundwater drinking sources should be a least
50m away - An area of at least 1500m2 per 10,000 population
is required. - The burial site can be divided to accommodate
different religious groups.
- Burial depth should be at least 1.5m above the
groundwater table, with at least a 1m covering of
soil. - Burial in individual graves is preferred
- If coffins are not available, corpses should be
wrapped in plastic sheeting.
23Burial
- Preserve evidence.
- Location of suitable grave sites difficult
- Local communities
- Environmental health concerns
- Operational difficulties
- Lack of suitable documentation
- Single graves or trench graves?
- Clearly marked, not a hole in the ground
- Minimum burial depth, distance from water sources
etc.
24Cremation
- There are no health advantages of cremation over
burial. - Some communities may prefer it for religious or
cultural reasons. - Factors against it
- The amount of fuel required by a single
cremation (approx 300kg wood) - Smoke pollution caused.
25Suggestions for burial
- Trench graves.
- One layer of bodies
- Location of each body clearly marked,
corresponding with identification data - Grave construction
- Water table at least 2.5m deep
- Bodies buried at least 1.5m deep
- 30m from springs watercourses
- 250m from wells drinking water sources
26- Burials in common graves and mass cremations are
rarely warranted and should be avoided. - Pan American Health Organization. Management of
Dead Bodies in Disaster Situations. Washington
DC PAHO, 2004.
27Recommendations for managingthe dead following
natural disasters
- Universal precautions for blood and body fluids.
- Time for action is short.
- Decomposition 24-72 hrs
- Body recovery begins immediately
- Avoiding cross-contamination of personal items.
- Washing hands after handling bodies and before
eating. - Disinfection of vehicles and equipment.
- Use of body bags.
- Hepatitis B and tetanus vaccination.
- No special arrangements, such as disinfection
with disposal of bodies. - New burial areas site at least 250 m away from
drinking water sources, and with at least 0.7 m
of distance above the saturated zone.
28Important principles
- Give priority to the living over the dead.
- Dispel myths about health risks posed by corpses.
- Identify and tag corpses.
- Provide appropriate mortuary services.
- Reject unceremonious and mass disposal of
unidentified corpses. - Respond to the wishes of the family.
- Respect cultural and religious observances.
- Protect communities from the transmission of
medical epidemics.
29Disposal of dead bodies in emergency
conditions World Health Organization
http//www.who.int
30http//www.paho.org/english/dd/ped/ManejoCadaveres
.htm
31References
- Harvey, P., Baghri, S. and Reed, R.A. (2002)
Emergency Sanitation, Assessment and Programme
Design. WEDC, Loughborough, UK. - Davis, J. and Lambert, R. (2002) Engineering in
Emergencies a Practical Guide for Relief
Workers, (2nd. Edn.) ITDG Publishing, London.
Wisner, B. and Adams, J. (eds.) (2002)
Environmental - Health in Emergencies and Disasters. WHO, Geneva.
Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) (2003)
Unseating the Myths Surrounding the Management
of Cadavers, Disaster newsletter, No. 93,
October 2003. PAHO, USA. - http//www.pitt.edu/super1/lecture/lec18941/index
.htm - Oliver Morgan Egbert Sondorp Management of the
dead following the South Asian tsunami
disaster.January 2005. retrieved from the web at
http//www.omorgan.info/download/projects/Study20
Protocol2020Dead20bodies20after20the20Tsunam
i.pdf - Morgan O. Infectious disease risk of dead bodies
following natural disasters. Rev Panam Salud
200415(5)307-312. - Pan American Health Organization. Management of
Dead Bodies in Disaster Situations. Washington
DC PAHO, 2004. - Yin R. Case Study Research. Design and Methods.
London Sage Publications,2003.