Government
of India Ministry of Health
& Family Welfare Directorate General of Health Services
(EMR Division)
COVID-19:
GUIDELINES ON DEAD BODY
MANAGEMENT
15.03.2020

· There are currently over 100 laboratory confirmed cases and two deaths due to Novel Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in India. Being a new disease there
is knowledge gap on how to dispose of dead body of a suspect or confirmed case of
COVID-19.
· This guideline is based on the current epidemiological knowledge about the COVID-19. India is currently having travel related
cases and few cases of
local transmission. At this stage, all suspect/ confirmed cases will be isolated in a health care facility. Hence the document is limited in scope to hospital deaths.

· The main driver of transmission of COVID-19 is through droplets. There is
unlikely to be an increased risk of COVID infection from
a dead body to health workers or family members who follow standard precautions
while handling body.
· Only the lungs of dead COVID patients, if handled during an autopsy, can be infectious.
3. Standard Precautions
to be
followed by
health
care

Standard infection prevention control practices should be followed at all times. These include:
1. Hand hygiene.
2. Use of personal protective equipment (e.g., water resistant apron, gloves, masks,
eyewear).
3. Safe handling of sharps.
4. Disinfect bag housing dead body; instruments and devices used on the
patient.
5. Disinfect linen. Clean and disinfect environmental surfaces.

All staff identified
to handle dead bodies in the isolation area, mortuary,
ambulance and those workers in the crematorium / burial ground should be trained in the infection prevention control practices.

· The health
worker attending
to
the
dead body should
perform hand
hygiene, ensure proper use of PPE (water resistant apron, goggles, N95 mask,
gloves).
· All tubes, drains and catheters on the dead body should be removed.
· Any puncture holes or wounds (resulting from removal of catheter, drains, tubes,
or otherwise) should be disinfected with 1% hypochlorite
and dressed with impermeable material.
· Apply caution while handling sharps such as intravenous catheters
and other sharp devices. They should be disposed into a sharps container.
· Plug Oral, nasal orifices of the dead body to prevent leakage of body fluids.
· If the family of the patient wishes to view the body at the time
of removal from
the isolation room or area, they may be allowed to do so with the application of
Standard Precautions.
· Place the dead body in leak-proof plastic body bag. The exterior of the body bag can be decontaminated with 1% hypochlorite.The body bagcan be wrapped with a mortuary sheet or sheet
provided by the family members.
· The body will be either handed over to the relatives or taken to mortuary.
· All used/ soiled linen should be handled with standard precautions, put in bio- hazard
bag and the outer surface of the bag disinfected with hypochlorite solution.
· Used equipment should be autoclaved or decontaminated with disinfectant
solutions in
accordance
with established
infection prevention
control
practices.
· All medical
waste must be handled and disposed of in accordance with Bio- medical
waste management
rules.
· The health
staff
who
handled the body
will
remove
personal
protective equipment and will perform hand hygiene.
· Provide counseling to the family members and respect their
sentiments.

All surfaces of the isolation area (floors, bed, railings, side tables, IV stand, etc.)
should
be wiped with 1% Sodium Hypochlorite solution; allow a contact time of
30 minutes, and then allowed to air dry.

· Mortuary staff handling COVID dead body should observe standard precautions.
· Dead bodies should be stored in cold chambers maintained at approximately
4°C.
· The mortuary must be kept clean. Environmental surfaces, instruments and transport trolleys should be properly disinfected with 1% Hypochlorite solution.
· After removing the body, the chamber door, handles and floor should be cleaned with sodium hypochlorite 1% solution.

· Embalming of
dead body should not be allowed.

Autopsies should
be
avoided. If autopsy is to be performed
for
special reasons, the following infection prevention control practices should be adopted:
· The Team should be well trained in infection prevention control practices.
· The number of forensic experts and support staff in the autopsy room should
be limited.
· The Team should
use full complement of PPE (coveralls,
head cover, shoe
cover, N 95 mask, goggles / face shield).
· Round ended scissors should be used
· PM40 or any other
heavy duty blades with blunted points to be used to reduce prick
injuries
· Only one body cavity at a time should be dissected
· Unfixed organs must
be held firm on the table and sliced with a sponge – care
should be taken to protect the hand
· Negative pressure
to be maintained
in
mortuary. An
oscillator saw
with
suction extraction of the bone aerosol into a removable chamber should be
used for sawing skull, otherwise a hand saw with a chain-mail glove may be
used
· Needles should
not
be
re-sheathed after
fluid sampling – needles
and
syringes should be placed in a sharps bucket.
· Reduce
aerosol generation during
autopsy
using appropriate techniques especially while handling lung tissue.
· After the procedure, body should be disinfected with 1% Sodium
Hypochlorite
and placed in a body bag, the exterior
of which will again be decontaminated
with 1% Sodium Hypochlorite solution.
· The body thereafter can be handed over to the relatives.
· Autopsy table to be disinfected as per standard protocol.

· The body, secured in a body bag, exterior of which is decontaminated poses
no additional risk to the staff
transporting the dead body.
· The personnel handling the body may follow standard precautions
(surgical mask, gloves).
· The vehicle, after the transfer of the body to cremation/ burial staff,
will be decontaminated with 1% Sodium Hypochlorite.

· The Crematorium/ burial Ground staff should be sensitized that COVID 19
does not pose additional risk.
· The staff will practice standard precautions of hand hygiene, use of masks
and gloves.
· Viewing of the dead body by unzipping the face end of the body bag (by the staff using standard precautions)
may
be allowed, for the relatives to see the
body
for one last time.
· Religious rituals such as reading from religious scripts, sprinkling holy water and any other last rites that does not require touching of the body can be
allowed.
· Bathing, kissing, hugging, etc. of the dead body should not be allowed.
· The funeral/
burial staff and family members should perform hand hygiene after
cremation/ burial.
· The ash does not pose any risk and can be
collected to perform the last rites.
· Large gathering at the crematorium/ burial ground should be avoided as a
social distancing measure as it is possible that close family contacts may be
symptomatic and/ or shedding the
virus.
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