Department of Oral Pathology and Microbiology, Dr. D.Y. Patil Dental College and Hospital, Dr. D.Y. Patil Vidyapeeth, Pune, India.
College of Dental Medicine, Roseman University of Health Sciences, South Jordan, Utah, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2018 Jun 28;13(6):e0199791. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0199791. eCollection 2018.
Forensic odontology (FO) is regarded in the literature as one of the most reliable and economical scientific methods for victim identification in mass disasters (MDs). The present paper systematically reviews the role of forensic odontologists in various global MDs.
A comprehensive search of the literature databases (PubMed, Medline, SCOPUS, Web of Science and Google Scholar), along with cross-referencing published peer-reviewed articles, was conducted. The search included full texts, abstracts or titles, had no inclusion year limit (searched until September 2017) and was limited to the English language. Keywords included a combination of 'Forensic odontology', 'Dental records', 'Victim identification', 'Natural mass disaster', 'Criminal mass disaster', 'Accidental mass disaster' and 'Victim disaster'.
Of the included disasters (20), 12 (57.14%) were accidental, 5 (23.80%) natural and 3 (19.04%) were criminal. The maximum number of victims was associated with the Japan tsunami (15892), followed by the Thailand tsunami (4280) and the Estonia ferry disaster (852). A total of 23654 victims were reported, of which 20569 (86.96%) were positively identified. Reports from 17 MDs included the use of FO in victim identification [3025 (14.70%) cases]. In addition, 1094 victims (5.31%; from 7 papers) were identified using FO in combination with other methodologies. The highest percentage of victims was identified using FO following the Kentucky air crash (47; 100%), followed by the Newark air crash (38; 76%), the Nepal air crash (10; 71.42%), the France air crash (56; 65.88%), the Australian bushfire (14; 63.63%), and the Estonia ferry disaster (57; 60.63%).
FO has played a significant role in victim identification in several MDs around the world. The success of FO-based identification is heavily dependent on the availability of ante-mortem records from general dental practitioners. Hence, adequate knowledge about FO and appropriate dental record keeping among general dental practitioners are critical.
法医学(FO)在文献中被认为是大规模灾难(MDs)中受害者识别的最可靠和最经济的科学方法之一。本文系统地综述了法医学家在各种全球 MDs 中的作用。
对文献数据库(PubMed、Medline、SCOPUS、Web of Science 和 Google Scholar)进行全面检索,同时查阅已发表的同行评议文章的参考文献。检索包括全文、摘要或标题,无纳入年限限制(检索截至 2017 年 9 月),仅限于英文。关键词包括“法医学”、“牙科记录”、“受害者识别”、“自然大规模灾难”、“犯罪大规模灾难”、“意外大规模灾难”和“受害者灾难”的组合。
在所纳入的灾难中(20 起),12 起(57.14%)为意外灾难,5 起(23.80%)为自然灾难,3 起(19.04%)为犯罪灾难。受害者人数最多的是日本海啸(15892 人),其次是泰国海啸(4280 人)和爱沙尼亚渡轮灾难(852 人)。共报告了 23654 名受害者,其中 20569 名(86.96%)得到了确认。有 17 起 MD 报告使用 FO 进行受害者识别[3025 例(14.70%)]。此外,还有 7 篇论文报告了使用 FO 结合其他方法识别 1094 名受害者(5.31%)。使用 FO 识别受害者的比例最高的是肯塔基空难(47 例;100%),其次是纽瓦克空难(38 例;76%)、尼泊尔空难(10 例;71.42%)、法国空难(56 例;65.88%)、澳大利亚丛林大火(14 例;63.63%)和爱沙尼亚渡轮灾难(57 例;60.63%)。
FO 在世界各地的几次 MDs 中受害者识别中发挥了重要作用。FO 识别的成功在很大程度上取决于一般牙医提供的生前记录。因此,一般牙医对 FO 的充分了解和适当的牙科记录保存至关重要。