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Home›Opinion›World Views | Medical examiners and coroners have borne a heavy burden during the Covid-19 pandemic

World Views | Medical examiners and coroners have borne a heavy burden during the Covid-19 pandemic

By -
December 10, 2021
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“We stopped doing heads.”

It was the second time I’d heard a medical examiner say this while I was studying how the roles of medical examiners and coroners have changed during the COVID-19 pandemic. 

A medical examiner from Ohio explained to me that opening a skull is one of the most dangerous parts of an autopsy in the COVID-19 era. This is because the kind of saw often used during autopsies has a beating motion that produces aerosols – among the primary modes of transmission of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. The medical examiner explained that his office would not open a skull unless absolutely necessary for the exam and then would use a high-powered vacuum to reduce particle spread from the process. 

This was one of several policies and practices medical examiners and coroners in the U.S. had to change when adapting to the ongoing pandemic.    

In the early months of the pandemic, doctors and nurses – or “front-line” health care workers – received much-deserved praise and recognition for their heroic actions. This included New Yorkers banging on pots and pans every night at 7 p.m. and Denver residents howling like wolves at 8 p.m. in support of front-line workers for months in 2020 – a tradition that returned in 2021 a year after the pandemic began. 

But “death care” workers such as coroners and medical examiners, who also are providing critical services during the ongoing pandemic, have been far less celebrated and recognized. Yet they have been struggling under the unceasing pressure of excess deaths, backed-up funeral systems and increased data-gathering responsibilities. They have also had to take on additional tasks of reporting COVID-19 data for public health purposes. And these workers have suffered a lot of burnout.

I am a public administration professor who is studying public servants in death care services. My work has highlighted the need to better understand the complex roles that these medical professionals play, especially when much of their work is unseen and not well understood by the general public.

The roles of medical examiners
and coroners

Since the beginning of the pandemic, medical examiners and coroners have dealt with repeated COVID-19 surges that as of November 2021 have left more than 768,000 Americans dead. Public health and reporting requirements following COVID-19 deaths added to these professionals’ already heavy workloads.

Medical examiners and coroners are public servants charged with carrying out medical, scientific and legal death investigations. Medical examiners have board-certified medical training in pathology, forensic pathology or another associated medical field and are appointed by county commissioners or other leaders. Coroners, who receive training in medical and legal investigation, are elected to their roles by voters. 

Outside of the context of COVID-19, these death care workers are called in to investigate suspicious, unnatural deaths. The process of death investigation in the U.S. is complicated and bureaucratic, and each state sets its own criteria. Some states have medical examiner systems, others have a coroner system, while still others might have a hybrid approach.

The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the need for additional safety precautions to reduce exposure and spread for the protection of medical examiners, coroners and death investigation teams. 

COVID-19 and excess deaths

Throughout the pandemic, public-facing offices of medical examiners’ and coroners’ offices might have closed, following COVID-19 guidelines, but the behind-the-scenes operations accelerated. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that COVID-19 contributed to more than 902,000 excess deaths – meaning deaths in addition to those statistically projected for an area based on past trends – in the U.S. as of late November 2021.

[Abridged]

Staci Zavattaro, University of Central Florida MDT/The Conversation

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