Boadum Oheneba, Ahenkorah John, Balta Joy Y
Department of Advanced Biomedical Education, University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, Mississippi, USA.
Department of Anatomy, University of Ghana Medical School, College of Health Sciences, University of Ghana, Accra, Ghana.
Anat Sci Educ. 2025 Jun;18(6):544-557. doi: 10.1002/ase.70038. Epub 2025 May 2.
Bodies of the deceased are important for training healthcare professionals in anatomy education, research, and clinical skills. While body donation programs exist in many countries around the world, few exist in Africa, likely due to strong religious convictions of the public, socioeconomic factors, and other difficulties. Consequently, many African anatomy programs rely on unclaimed and unidentified bodies, many of which are abandoned in hospitals or mortuaries. This study investigated the different sources of bodies of the deceased and their use in education in West Africa. Fifty-seven institutions in 15 West-African countries were contacted. Of these, 27 institutions (48.2% response rate) from 11 countries (Benin, Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Gambia, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, and Senegal) responded. Information around body management and utilization for public engagement, high school tours, imaging, and research was also explored. Only two institutions in Ghana had body donation programs. Sixty-three percent of bodies were from unclaimed and unidentified sources, with 69% of unclaimed bodies coming from health facilities. The bodies of executed persons were used for anatomical purposes only in Nigeria. Given the reliance on unclaimed bodies, these findings highlight the need for efforts to build body donation programs. Efforts to identify deceased persons through outreach services should be pursued, alongside legislation permitting their use. Engaging religious, cultural, and social leaders is essential to improve awareness of body donation. This study presents the first attempt to capture a comprehensive set of data on body procurement in anatomy from several nations in West Africa.
逝者遗体对于医学专业人员进行解剖学教育、研究和临床技能培训至关重要。虽然世界上许多国家都有遗体捐赠项目,但非洲的此类项目却很少,这可能是由于公众强烈的宗教信仰、社会经济因素以及其他困难所致。因此,许多非洲的解剖学项目依赖无人认领和身份不明的遗体,其中许多被遗弃在医院或太平间。本研究调查了西非逝者遗体的不同来源及其在教育中的使用情况。研究联系了西非15个国家的57所机构。其中,来自11个国家(贝宁、布基纳法索、佛得角、冈比亚、加纳、科特迪瓦、马里、毛里塔尼亚、尼日尔、尼日利亚和塞内加尔)的27所机构(回复率为48.2%)作出了回复。研究还探讨了遗体管理以及用于公众参与、高中参观、成像和研究等方面的情况。加纳只有两所机构设有遗体捐赠项目。63%的遗体来自无人认领和身份不明的来源,其中69%的无人认领遗体来自医疗机构。仅在尼日利亚,处决犯人的遗体被用于解剖目的。鉴于对无人认领遗体的依赖,这些发现凸显了建立遗体捐赠项目的必要性。应通过外展服务努力识别逝者身份,并制定允许使用遗体的相关立法。与宗教、文化和社会领袖合作对于提高遗体捐赠意识至关重要。本研究首次尝试收集西非几个国家解剖学遗体采购的全面数据集。