De Valck Eddy
Forensic Sci Int. 2006 May 15;159 Suppl 1:S15-9. doi: 10.1016/j.forsciint.2006.02.004. Epub 2006 Mar 20.
The Asian tsunami of 26 December 2004, which devastated coastal parts of more than 10 countries in and around the Indian Ocean caused over 200,000 casualties. People from more than 58 nationalities were amongst the victims and subsequently an international effort for disaster victim identification (DVI) was set up, coordinated by Interpol. DVI teams from more than 20 countries took part in the identification process which, because of the complexity of the situation, had to be conducted in an internationally agreed upon procedure. Standard operating protocols of post-mortem (PM) procedures were established for fingerprinting, forensic pathology, forensic odontology and DNA profiling and were crucial in the quality of the entire DVI process of the quickly decomposing bodies. A very important and underestimated part of the DVI process is the gathering of the ante-mortem (AM) data of the persons reported missing in their home countries. In the wake of this tsunami event it appeared to be even more problematic as entire families had died and information was difficult to obtain. As dentistry proved to be the most valuable identification mean--up to 85% of the cases--the AM dental records proved to be crucial elements for DVI. Standard operating protocols (SOP) were again established as to who, where, when and what information had to be collected by the dentists by the AM teams abroad. Transcribing the AM dental information by experienced forensic odontologists was another crucial element in the whole identification procedure as the information had to be loaded into the DVI System International (Plass Data, Holbaek, Denmark) for comparison with incoming PM data. The Interpol DVI Standing Committee thus recommends that forward planning, adequate funding, international cooperation and standardisation are essential to guarantee an effective response to any major mass disaster of this kind in the future.
2004年12月26日的亚洲海啸摧毁了印度洋及其周边10多个国家的沿海地区,造成20多万人伤亡。受害者中有来自58个以上国籍的人,随后由国际刑警组织协调开展了一项国际灾难受害者身份识别(DVI)工作。来自20多个国家的DVI小组参与了身份识别过程,由于情况复杂,该过程必须按照国际商定的程序进行。为指纹识别、法医病理学、法医牙科学和DNA分析建立了尸检(PM)程序的标准操作规范,这些规范对快速腐烂尸体的整个DVI过程的质量至关重要。DVI过程中一个非常重要但被低估的部分是收集在其本国报告失踪人员的生前(AM)数据。在这次海啸事件之后,由于整个家庭都已死亡且信息难以获取,这一问题显得更加突出。由于牙科学被证明是最有价值的身份识别手段——高达85%的案例——生前牙科记录被证明是DVI的关键要素。再次制定了标准操作规范(SOP),规定国外生前小组的牙医必须由谁、在何处、何时以及收集哪些信息。由经验丰富的法医牙科学家转录生前牙科信息是整个身份识别程序中的另一个关键要素,因为这些信息必须输入到国际DVI系统(丹麦霍尔拜克的Plass Data公司)中,以便与传入的尸检数据进行比对。因此,国际刑警组织DVI常务委员会建议,预先规划、充足的资金、国际合作和标准化对于确保未来有效应对任何此类重大大规模灾难至关重要。