Autopsy Practice, Potential Sources of Occupational Hazards: A Review for Safety and Prevention

Authors

  • Sunil S Kadam Prof & HOD, Dept. of Forensic Medicine and Toxicology, K. J. Somaiya Medical College & Research Centre, Sion, Mumbai 400022, India
  • Swapnil Akhade Assist Prof, Dept. of Forensic Medicine and Toxicology, K. J. Somaiya Medical College & Research Centre, Sion, Mumbai 400022, India
  • Keith Desouza Assist Lecturer Dept. of Forensic Medicine and Toxicology, K. J. Somaiya Medical College & Research Centre, Sion, Mumbai 400022, India

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.48165/

Keywords:

Autopsy room, Mortuary, Occupational safety & health, Occupational hazard

Abstract

The mortuary can be a dangerous place. At greatest risk in this environment is the individual who  is ignorant of or ignores the potential hazards at necropsy. Such people are a liability to themselves as  also to colleagues working in the mortuary, visitors to the mortuary (clinical staff and students), and those  involved in handling the body (relatives, undertakers, embalmers and crematoria staff), or material  derived from it (laboratory workers) after necropsy. The hazard posed by some material or situation is its  potential to cause harm. Risk is the probability or chance that it will actually harm someone. In India, both  the mortuaries and their safety norms are lagging behind the expected international standards. The  autopsy surgeons are prone to a myriad of occupational risks in the form of contagious diseases which  may be due to the faulty mortuary infrastructure like drainage systems, ventilation and biomedical waste  disposal. Added to these are the lackadaisical administrative approach and the pathetic implementation of  mandatory safety guidelines. This review article focuses on commonly encountered occupational risk in  autopsy practice and guidelines to minimize them. 

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Published

2015-07-30

How to Cite

Kadam, S. S., Akhade, S., & Desouza , K. (2015). Autopsy Practice, Potential Sources of Occupational Hazards: A Review for Safety and Prevention . Journal of Indian Academy of Forensic Medicine, 37(2), 196-201. https://doi.org/10.48165/