key: cord-0785003-m0cckidw authors: Na, Joo-Young; Noh, Sang Jae; Choi, Min Sung; Park, Jong-Pil title: [Secondary Publication] Standard Operating Procedure for Post-mortem Inspection in a Focus on Coronavirus Disease-19: the Korean Society for Legal Medicine date: 2020-08-13 journal: J Korean Med Sci DOI: 10.3346/jkms.2020.35.e302 sha: 292a2f06066e2e133a8e49414f196762334cddae doc_id: 785003 cord_uid: m0cckidw Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a respiratory syndrome caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) and emerged in Wuhan, China, in late 2019. It resulted in a worldwide pandemic, and spread through community transmission in the Republic of Korea (ROK). In the ROK, SARS-CoV-2 is categorized as a first-degree infectious disease of the legal communicable disease present. The Korean Society for Legal Medicine (KSLM) is the sole official academic association of forensic professionals in the ROK. As such, this society has played an important role in forensic medicine and science in the ROK. Therefore, KSLM suggests a standard operating procedure for the postmortem inspection in a focus on COVID-19. This article includes the background of this suggested standard operation procedure, basic principles for postmortem inspections of individuals suggested of having an infectious disease, and specific procedures according to the probability level of SARS-CoV-2 infection. Post-mortem inspection is an external examination of a dead person and is performed to determine the cause and manner of death. Although identifying unnatural death is the main objective of a post-mortem inspection, natural death also accounts for a large percentage of actual post-mortem inspection cases. In general, patients who die from infectious diseases, including coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19), are not subject to post-mortem inspection because they passed away while being treated in medical institutions. However, if the cause and manner of death of the patient with confirmed COVID-19 cannot be determined, the cause and manner of death needs to be clarified, and post-mortem inspection should be conducted. Furthermore, patients with suspected COVID-19 or limited clinical information and a history of exposure to COVID-19 may be subject to post-mortem inspection, and quarantine and preventive measures should be taken to prevent infection and transmission from latent COVID-19. As COVID-19 has become a global pandemic, and community transmission continues, undiagnosed or latent COVID-19 cannot be ruled out in post-mortem inspection cases. Vulnerable groups, such as those with chronic diseases, those living alone, and the elderly, account for a large proportion of the post-mortem inspection cases. Therefore, post-mortem inspection guidelines for infection prevention, including COVID-19, should be prepared in advance. The Korean Society for Legal Medicine, a highly specialized organization responsible for post-mortem examination and death investigation, aims to protect multiple staff-related post-mortem examinations and prevent the spread of COVID-19 in medical institutions and communities to improve social stability through this guideline for COVID-19 post-mortem inspections. Currently, in the Republic of Korea, post-mortem inspection is conducted at the death scene, emergency room, or morgue. The risk of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection during post-mortem inspection of a dead body is relatively lower than that in the case of medical procedures or treatments because dead bodies do not cough and spread droplets. However, an examination of the nostrils and oral cavity is essential during post-mortem inspection. Infectious materials like body fluids can be spilled from nostrils, mouth, and anus of the dead body, and can be existing around it. The house of a dead person and the field at which post-mortem inspection is performed can be contaminated. Furthermore, doctors who perform post-mortem inspections interview the family or the persons who closely contacted the deceased, so the risk of infection surely exists during post-mortem inspection. Infectivity persists for a certain period after the death of the host in most infectious diseases. For example, HIV-infected bodies should be considered infectious for at least two weeks after death. Hepatitis B virus (HBV) in the environment is also hardy. HBV in human plasma retains infectivity one week after drying and exposure to an ambient environment. 1 Postmortem infection of SARS-CoV-2 has not been reported; however, the exact post-mortem infectivity remains unknown. Furthermore, the stability of SARS-CoV-2 was similar to that of SARS-CoV-1 when tested under experimental conditions. SARS-CoV-2 remained viable in aerosol for three hours. It was more stable on plastic and stainless steel than on cooper and cardboard, with a viability of 72 hours after application to these surfaces. Thus, aerosol and fomite transmission of SARS-CoV-2 is plausible since the virus can remain viable and infectious in aerosol for hours and up to days on surfaces (depending on the inoculum shed). 2 Moreover, SARS-CoV-2 can be detected in anal swabs and blood. The number of positive anal swabs was more than the number of positive oropharyngeal swabs in the later stage of the infection, suggesting shedding and thereby transmission through the oral-fecal route. 3 The persistence of SARS-CoV, which belongs to the family Coronaviridae, the same as SARS-CoV-2, was observed in feces, urine, and water. In vitro experiments showed that the virus was viable for two days in hospital wastewater, domestic sewage, and dechlorinated tap water, three days in feces, fourteen days in phosphate buffer saline (PBS), and seventeen days in urine at 20°C. 4 Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) can be detected in the nasal swab of an infected human cadaver (three days following death). In the case of patient death, the deceased should be treated as infectious and as having the ability to transmit the infection. 5 The analysis of 22 studies reveals that human coronaviruses such as SARS coronavirus, MERS coronavirus or endemic human coronaviruses can remain viable on inanimate surfaces such as metal, glass, or plastic for up to nine days. 6 Therefore, the possibility of infection during postmortem inspection of a dead person who is suspected to be infected by SARS-CoV-2 should be kept in mind and is important to prevent a post-mortem transmission of SARS-CoV-2 considering the principles for living patients of SARS-CoV-2. COVID-19 has spread worldwide, and major international organizations and health authorities in developed countries have prepared and reported guidelines for post-mortem examination of dead bodies with a high risk of infection. 7-11 However, the post-mortem investigation system differs among countries. The principles and methods of both the clinical approach and post-mortem investigation of COVID-19 are also different among countries. Therefore, it is impossible to accept these guidelines for the Republic of Korea, and these guidelines should be used as a reference. We used both guidelines for living patients of SARS-CoV-2 and international guidelines for the post-mortem investigation of SARS-CoV-2 as references. In almost all cases of unnatural death, medical history and traces of the past activity are unknown. The doctor is at risk of getting infected while performing a post-mortem inspection. Therefore, post-mortem inspection should be performed under the following basic principles to protect human resources and the local community from post-mortem infection resulting from post-mortem inspection procedures. For all unnatural deaths during an epidemic or a pandemic, a post-mortem caretaker wearing personal protective equipment (PPE) must cover the body following corpse handling guidelines. The external surfaces of the body bag must be sanitized and placed into a second bag for double sealing, and the bodies must be transported to the public morgue, which has safe facilities for protecting the local community from infection. Before post-mortem inspection is performed, infectious diseases must be diagnosed. Post-mortem inspection is performed by professionals according to the result of the diagnosis of infection. This standard operating procedure distinguishes bodies according to the possibility of infection, considering the current situation in which human resources, systems, and facilities are inadequate in the Republic of Korea. The laboratory test for diagnosis of COVID-19 was conducted according to the decision of the doctor and investigating professionals. However, the following conditions should be fulfilled to protect the post-mortem caretaker and the local community from post-mortem infection; a public morgue which has safe facilities; diagnosis of infection for all unnatural deaths before post-mortem inspection; right to inquire the past medical history of the deceased from the doctor who performs a postmortem inspection. Bodies related to COVID-19 can be divided into three categories: bodies confirmed as COVID-19; bodies that may be infected; and bodies with no or insufficient information related to death, including COVID-19 (Fig. 1) . To classify patients according to the likelihood of infection, SARS-CoV-2 evaluation must first be performed. Due to the nature of postmortem inspection, in most cases, there is no or insufficient ante-mortem information, so collaboration with investigative agencies, local governments, and relevant public health centers is essential to determine the possibility of SARS-CoV-2 infection. Identification of the deceased should be preceded, and based on this, it is necessary to check whether he or she was registered as a subject to manage patients in a local health center. Additionally, investigations of the past and current medical history, as well as the people who surrounded the deceased, should be conducted. If a diagnosed patient dies from COVID-19, it is not subject to post-mortem inspection. However, if it is not possible to determine whether the patient died of COVID-19, or if the patient died from a cause of death other than COVID-19, especially if the death was following the unusual death guidelines published by the Korean Society for Legal Medicine, postmortem inspection should be carried out. -Underwater bodies and deaths associated with fire accidents -Death in custody, including taking to a police station, detention, interrogation, detention centers and prisons -Deaths in collective welfare accommodations such as mental health facilities and orphanages -Deaths of young and old people who seemed to be healthy but died suddenly -Deaths of infants, children, and adolescents who are not being treated by medical institutions -Deaths suspected due to acute poisoning -Deaths of unknown cause at a medical institution 1) Subject: The deceased who was confirmed according to the diagnostic criteria for COVID-19 (virus isolation and SARS-CoV-2 gene polymerase chain reaction test) regardless of clinical features. 2) Post-mortem inspection should be conducted with minimum manpower, comprising one medical doctor and one member of an investigative agency, and the additional necessary personnel is decided according to the situation. 1) Subject: The deceased who was managed as a suspected patient, a patient under investigation and a person in contact with suspected patients before death. Each definition is as follows. A. Suspected patient: A person who displayed clinical symptoms (fever of more than 37.5°C or respiratory symptoms such as cough and dyspnea) within 14 days of contact with a confirmed COVID-19 patient B. Patient under investigation: • C. Person in contact with confirmed patients: A person who has been in contact with a confirmed patient, and has been confirmed through an epidemiological investigation at the local public health center. 2) After confirming the identity of the deceased, if it is necessary to confirm whether he or she has the possibility of infection with COVID-19, request confirmation to the public health center. 3) In principle, a coronavirus test is referred to the local public health center and postmortem inspection should be performed according to the results. 1) After confirming the identity of the deceased, if it is necessary to confirm whether he or she has the possibility of infection with COVID-19, request confirmation to the public health center through the police in charge, and proceed with the post-mortem inspection. 2) Before the post-mortem inspection is started, the possibility of infection should be confirmed through interviews with relatives and close contacts of the deceased. 3) If COVID-19 cannot be ruled out reliably, the deceased should always be considered as a corpse that may be infected with COVID-19, and post-mortem inspection should be carried out while wearing appropriate PPE. A. Wear equipment for appropriate respiratory protection (medical mask), full body protection (gloves, a disposable waterproof long sleeve gown), and eye protection (goggles or a face shield). B. Be cautious about wearing PPE, as there is a possibility of self-containment through epidemiological investigations if the deceased is found to be an infected person after postmortem inspection (based on the work standard of medical staff contacting COVID-19 patients, the recommended monitoring is self-monitoring level because medical personnel wearing all the recommended protective equipment have a low exposure risk when handling or contacting the patient's secretions and feces). 14 C. In the process of post-mortem inspection, if the body is found to be or seem to be infected, immediately report it to the public health center through the police in charge and, if necessary, fill out an infectious disease report. 13 • If you did not wear adequate protective equipment, report it to the public health center and enter quarantine. • If the test result of the deceased is negative, immediately discontinue the quarantine, and if positive, maintain quarantine for 14 days (even if there are no symptoms, the test is conducted on the 13th day of containment to confirm that it is negative, the person is released on completion of the 14-day containment). (1) If it is determined during the post-mortem inspection that testing for COVID-19 is necessary, report it to the public health center for cooperation with the health authority and the investigative agency. (2) If samples are to be taken from the corpse, follow the COVID-19 guidelines for safe sampling and handling of samples published by the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (KCDC). 15 1) Upper respiratory tract specimens can be collected during post-mortem inspection. Samples from both the nasopharynx and oropharynx are placed in the same transport tube with viral transport medium, and sent for analysis with test request form. 16 A. Nasopharyngeal swab: Gently insert a sterile swab through the nostril parallel to the nasal mid-turbinate. Rub and roll the swab. Leave the swab in place for a few seconds to absorb the nasal secretion. Slowly rotate the swab and extract it. B. Oropharyngeal swab: Gently insert a sterile swab into the oropharynx, rub the swab over the posterior oropharyngeal wall, and avoid contamination from the tongue and other areas of the oral cavity. 2) All samples for COVID-19 testing should be packaged and transported following COVID-19 guidelines for safe sampling and handling of samples published by the KCDC. Sample packaging and transportation are handled by the public health center and the police. (1) Medical wastes such as protective equipment should be disposed off in a separate waste bag and notified to the public health center if post-mortem inspection and specimen sampling are performed in the residence of a deceased person. (2) Use the waste disposal facility within the medical institution, if the post-mortem inspection and specimen sampling are performed at a hospital (example, an emergency room or a morgue). (3) Waste should be handled according to the general guidelines of the KCDC. 17 It is reasonable to focus primarily on the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of living patients when new infectious diseases are prevalent. However, to improve the quarantine and preventive system, proper management of the deceased person with known or suspected COVID-19 should be done, and appropriate protection and diagnosis should be taken during the post-mortem inspection. In Republic of Korea, unusual death cases are managed by the judiciary system, not by medical professionals or the health authority, and quarantine is overlooked during the post-mortem examination process. Therefore, these guidelines will improve the preventive and quarantine process. 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Considerations related to the safe handling of bodies of deceased persons with suspected or confirmed COVID-19 International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC): General guidance for the management of the dead related to COVID-19 International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, International Committee of the Red Cross, World Health Organization. COVID-19 Interim Guidance for the Management of the Dead in Humanitarian Settings COVID-19 guidelines (for local government) Enforcement Decree of Infectious Disease Control and Prevention Act COVID-19 guidelines for funeral of the dead COVID-19 guidelines (for local government) COVID-19 guidelines (for local government)