forensic aspect of disaster casualty management; tsunami

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Forensic Aspect of Disaster Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Casualty Management; Tsunami Victim Identification Tsunami Victim Identification in Thailand in Thailand Dr. Dr. Pongruk Pongruk SRIBANDITMONGKOL SRIBANDITMONGKOL Department of Forensic Medicine, Department of Forensic Medicine, Chiang Mai University Chiang Mai University

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Page 1: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Forensic Aspect of Disaster Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management;Casualty Management;

Tsunami Victim Identification Tsunami Victim Identification in Thailandin Thailand

Dr. Dr. PongrukPongruk SRIBANDITMONGKOLSRIBANDITMONGKOLDepartment of Forensic Medicine, Department of Forensic Medicine,

Chiang Mai UniversityChiang Mai University

Page 2: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Prepared byPrepared by

•• Dr. Dr. PongrukPongruk SribanditmongkolSribanditmongkol•• Dr. Porn Dr. Porn PongpanitanontPongpanitanont•• Dr. Dr. NopNop PorntrakulsereePorntrakulseree•• Dr. Dr. MaythineeMaythinee PetjuPetju•• Dr. Dr. SupachaiSupachai KunaratanaprukKunaratanapruk•• PolPol..LtLt..ColCol.. PattanaPattana KitkailassKitkailass,, MDMD•• Pol.ColPol.Col. . PornpraseartPornpraseart GanjanarintrGanjanarintr•• Gen Gen NopadolNopadol SomboonsubSomboonsub

Page 3: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Scope of presentation

• Tsunami victim identification in Thailand– What have been done?– What did not work?

• What do we learn?• What should be done?

Page 4: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

• December 26, 2004, a 9.0 Richter scale earthquake occurred north of Sumatra Island.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:2004_Indonesia_Tsunami_Complete.gif

Page 5: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

• Caused a huge tsunami

• struck countries on the coast of the Indian Ocean, including Thailand

from Manfred Leier, World Atlas of the Oceans, 2000, Firefly Books, Buffalo NY, USA.

www.http//saranitet.police.go.th/0008/fv92.htm

Page 6: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Tsunami hit Thailand10:05 hoursMax. height4-10.6 m(12-32 feet)

http://www.aviation.go.th/rbm/tsunami_files/tsunami.htm#4

Page 7: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

The number of deaths in Thailand

Province No. of Deaths

Ranong 160Phang Nga 4,224Phuket 279Krabi 721Trang 5Satun 6

Total 5,395reported by the Thai authorities Official figures as at 24 March

Photo from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Souththailand.GIF

Page 8: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Forensic Aspect• Under the Thai law, a forensic

investigation is required for these types of deaths.

• In general, the purpose is – to identify the victim – to determine the time and place of death– to determine the cause and manner of

death.

main purpose for tsunami victims

Page 9: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Management of Dead Bodies in Thailand

Responsible Institution

Inter-institution Teams

Search and Recovery

Final Arrangement

Identification

Assistance for Family members

Supported by

Coordinated by

Storage and preservation

Page 10: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Responsible Institution• At the beginning- not clear, no command center

related to management of dead bodies• During the early period; under

– Department of Disaster Prevention and Mitigation, Ministry of Interior

– The Royal Thai Police– The Ministry of Public Health

• Jan 13, 2005; Set up The Tsunami Victim Identification Executive Committee, chaired by the Minister of Interior

Page 11: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Inter-institution Team

• academic institutes• local government• military• police• Public Health• NGO• volunteers

Page 12: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Body search and recovery• Conducted by

– Local Government / Ministry of Interior– Military – Charity Foundations Team (volunteer

rescue teams)

Page 13: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Body search and recovery• Performed after rescued survivors• Transferred bodies to temporary morgues

• No central coordinator, not in the order • Did not map the location where the bodies

found• Did not label the corpses

Page 14: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Examination of bodies

Morgue sites• Established in the

affected area by forensic teams and local government

• Using temples or public areas

Page 15: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Setting in the temporary morgues

• Holding area– On the floor– In the pavilion of

temples

Page 16: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

• Examination Area– On the site – sunny and

temperature up to 39 ˚C

– performed examination on the ground, no facilities

Page 17: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Body identification1. Conducted by local authorities then

released at scene.– Families came and identified victims at

scene.

Page 18: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Body identification2. Examined by Thai forensic teams from

various institutes.– Using institute’s protocol

• Labeling number to the cases• Photograph• Record external appearance, personal

belongings and specific marks.

• No committee nor meeting together before start working.

Page 19: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Finger printing

• Conducted by crime scene investigation police

• performed about 600 cases• Reasons not to collect all of the cases

– Lack of cooperation between relevant authorities

– Not enough staff– Bodies were decomposed

Page 20: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Dental examination• Occurred on the fifth day after the disaster• Organized by the Thai Dentist Council• Conducted by the Thai dentists from

– Various universities - Government hospitals– Private hospitals and clinics

• About 550 dentists, mostly were not forensic dentists

Page 21: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Identification and released of the bodies

Summary of identifications, examinations and releases by Thai forensic teamsNo. of deaths

Identified by local authorities

Examined by Thai Forensic team before TTVI

Released by Thai Forensic team before TTVI

5,395 560 3,698 1,151

Almost identified by external and physical appearance

Page 22: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Summary of victims identified by Dental record during the early phase No. of deaths

Dental examination by

Thai Dentist team

Identified and released based on

dental records

5,395 2070 111

Page 23: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

DNA analysis

• Specimen collection from post mortem– Buccal during the first few days– Hairs during the first few days– Muscle during the first few days– Rib– Tooth– Femur

Page 24: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

DNA Laboratories

• Department of Forensic Medicine, Siriraj hospital

• Forensic unit, Ramathibody hospital• Institute of Forensic Medicine, and

Crime Scene Investigation Police Office, Royal Thai Police

• Forensic Science Institute, Ministry of Justice

Page 25: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Result of DNA analysis from Thai laboratories

AM PM Possible match

1930 cases 664 cases 310*

*In the process of identification or collecting more specimens to compare

Page 26: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Storage and preservation of the bodies

During the first week

During the end of first weekAfter the second week

Page 27: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Bury the deceased• After a week, without any proper

preservation method and the bodies were more decomposed.

• About 300 corpses from Phang-Ngathen were buried, but later the bodies were excavated up and kept in the refrigerated containers for further identification.

Page 28: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Assistance for Family members• To receive victim’s ante mortem data

using– local hospital staff– police– volunteers

• No really set up the AM center nor the Family assistance center to help the family members get over with this tragedy and accept for the losses of their loved ones.

Page 29: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Problems in victim identification

• Management perspective• Technical perspective

Page 30: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Problems in victim identification

Management perspective• Lack of central coordinator and

command center.• No proper storage method and

preserve the bodies• Shortage of available resources

response to the situation

Page 31: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Problems in victim identificationTechnical perspective• No single numbering and labeling system• No standard protocol of body examination.• Redundant body examinations• Lack of experienced and number of staff, eg.

forensic dentists, fingerprint experts• Cannot consolidate information to single

system.

Page 32: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Problems in victim identification• Lack of ante mortem information from

families especially dental records and fingerprints

Page 33: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Problems in victim identification

Lack of National Mass Fatality plan

Page 34: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Consolidation of victim identification

• Thai Tsunami Victim Identification (TTVI)

• International DVI and Thai forensic teams cooperation under the control of Thai authorities

• All bodies were treated equally using the Interpol DVI examination protocal.

• All the information are consolidatedinto a single system

Page 35: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Number of bodies examined, identified and released under TTVI operation

Body examination (including additional examination)

Identified and released(cases)

Bodies unidentified (cases)

3,684 1,369 2,315

Approximately 43 % of total

deaths in Thailand

Source: TTVI on April 18, 2005

Page 36: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Reconciled bodies by primary evidence

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

Dental Fingerprint DNA Physical

85.8 %

12.6 %

0.4% 1.2%

Source: TTVI on April 18, 2005

Page 37: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

At present

• All the unidentified bodies had dental,fingerprints and DNA specimenscollected.

• All post mortem data are placed in the TTVI database (PLASS data)

• 2242 ante mortem records are in the system, only 368 from Thai

Page 38: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

Reconciled Thai victims by primary evidence under TTVI (after Feb 3, 05)

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

Dental Fingerprint DNA Physical

55 %

39 %

3 % 3 %

Source: TTVI on April 18, 2005

Page 39: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

What do we learn?• Identification and return bodies back to

their families is an important health issue related to mass disaster.

• This tsunami devastation is over the expectation and the available resources.

Page 40: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

What do we learn?

• The command center of victim identification is necessary and should be set up as soon as possible and responsible for the whole processes of identification.

• The labeling and numbering should be one system to avoid confounding bodies and data.

Page 41: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

What do we learn?• Preparation of morgue sites as well as

storage system is important at the beginning in order to have a proper work place and avoid any hazard to personnel as well as the environment.

• Data should be consolidated to one system so that it is easy to access by victim’s families.

Page 42: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

What do we learn?

• Identification of the victims should based on the external evidences, dental records, fingerprints, and DNA.

–Should not rely only on DNA-

Page 43: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

What should be done?• National Mass Fatality Plan• System of National Mass Victims

Identification– Recruitment of personnel.– Post mortem storage and examination.– Ante mortem information from families.– Long term storage of unidentified corpses.– Data management– Family assistance

Page 44: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami

What should be done?

Since the severity of any disaster maynot be predicted exactly, preparation of the relevant resources may not enough.

International cooperation and assistance are necessary and play an important role in an international disaster.

Page 45: Forensic Aspect of Disaster Casualty Management; Tsunami