Morgue Setup - Staging Ground Zero
- Objective: Establish a secure, organized facility for Disaster Victim Identification (DVI) processing in Mass Fatality Incidents (MFI) adhering to INTERPOL DVI standards and NDMA guidelines.
- Site Selection Criteria:
- Security: Controlled access, perimeter integrity with BNSS Section 41 compliance.
- Accessibility: For vehicles and personnel.
- Infrastructure: Reliable power, water, lighting, ventilation, and drainage.
- Space: Sufficient for operations, body storage, and potential expansion.
- Discretion: Shielded from public and media view.
- Key Functional Areas (Unidirectional flow ideal):
- Receiving Area: Body intake, triage, initial documentation, and BSA-compliant chain of custody tagging.
- Post-mortem (PM) Examination Area: Includes sections for pathology, odontology, fingerprinting, DNA sampling, and portable X-ray/CT imaging.
- Refrigerated Storage: For body preservation with humidity control and specialized body bags.
- Administrative Area: For digital records, communication, and coordination.
- Decontamination Zone with strict biosafety protocols and PPE requirements.
⭐ Ideal temperature for refrigerated body storage in temporary morgues is 2°C to 4°C with consistent humidity control and potential freezing capability for prolonged storage.
DVI Teams & Roles - ID Taskforce Titans
| Team | Key Personnel | Primary Functions |
|---|---|---|
| Post-mortem (PM) | Pathologists, Odontologists, Fingerprint Experts | Examine remains; collect PM data (dental, DNA, prints, property) |
| Ante-mortem (AM) | Interviewers, Data Clerks | Collect missing person data from families (records, DNA samples) |
| Reconciliation | ID Specialists | Compare AM & PM data; propose matches to ID Board |
| Support | Logistics, Security, IT, Family Liaison | Smooth operations, communication, family care, documentation |
Body Processing Workflow - Evidence Uncovered Trail
Systematic processing is vital for DVI. Each victim receives a unique DVI number. Meticulous documentation and chain of custody are paramount for all evidence.

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Core Workflow:
-
Key Stages & Evidence:
- Admission: Assign unique PM DVI number (e.g., DVI-IND-001), initial documentation.
- Photography: Standardized views: full body, face, identifying features (scars, tattoos), any injuries.
- Fingerprints: Record all digits; for antemortem (AM) data comparison.
- Dental: Detailed charting, X-rays; highly reliable for identification.
- Medical/Autopsy: If needed, determine cause/manner of death; collect biological samples.
- DNA: Samples (blood, muscle, bone, teeth) for genetic profiling.
- Personal Effects: Inventoried, photographed, bagged, secured separately.
⭐ The cornerstone of DVI morgue operations is the assignment of a unique identification number to each body and all associated samples/effects, ensuring an unbroken chain of custody.
Data, ID & Release - Connecting Final Dots
- Data Collation & Comparison:
- Ante-mortem (AM) data: Interpol Yellow AM forms (from relatives, medical/dental records).
- Post-mortem (PM) data: Interpol Pink PM forms (from body examination, pathology, odontology, DNA).

- Identification (ID) Panel/Board:
- Reconciliation meeting: Systematic comparison of AM and PM data.
- Decision based on sufficiency of evidence; primary identifiers are key.
- ⭐ > Primary identifiers (DNA, fingerprints, dental records) offer the highest reliability for positive identification. Secondary identifiers (e.g., personal descriptions, clothing, medical findings) provide supportive evidence.
- Final Procedures & Release:
- Issuance of Death Certificate: Stating identity and cause of death.
- Debriefing and counseling for relatives.
- Formal, documented release of remains to legally authorized persons/next-of-kin (NOK).
- Core Objective: Orderly victim processing, positive identification, dignified storage.
- Location: Secure, accessible, with utilities (power/water); safe from disaster.
- Sections: Reception, PM exam (dental, DNA, prints), AM data comparison, refrigerated storage.
- Personnel: Multidisciplinary DVI team (pathologists, odontologists, fingerprint experts, police).
- Records: Accurate documentation (unique IDs), chain of custody critical; INTERPOL DVI forms.
- Safety: Strict infection control (PPE), security, staff well-being.
- Body Management: Refrigeration (2-4°C) ideal; else rapid processing or cooling_methods_.
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