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Editorial
A Disaster Myth That Just Won’t
Die
Mass burials and the dignity of disaster
victims
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In
Indonesia, relief workers helped disaster survivors
in the process of identifying lost family members. |
It was South Asia’s
worst natural disaster in memory—the earthquake and
tidal wave that claimed more than 250,000 lives in a dozen
countries last December. But as the death toll climbed in
the days following the disaster, media reports warned that
a second calamity was in the making: dangerous disease outbreaks
caused by the legions of rotting bodies.
“International
organizations urged that the thousands of bloated corpses
littering beaches, streets and makeshift morgues be disposed
of quickly to stem the threat of disease,” one news
agency reported. Other media reports were equally alarming.
One quoted a microbiologist saying that “There is a
very high risk of epidemics breaking out in all these places.
Decaying bodies are bacteria factories. The bodies must be
quickly disposed of.” Another noted, “Worried
that rotting corpses could take more lives by spreading disease,
health officials ordered them collected in city trucks and
dumped in mass graves.”
The notion that dead
bodies pose an urgent health threat in the aftermath of a
disaster is one of several enduring myths about disasters
and relief efforts that live on. Survivors, however, are much
more likely to be a source of disease outbreaks. Most victims
of natural disasters die of trauma, drowning or burns rather
than from infection, and victims are no more likely to carry
infectious agents than survivors. Someone who died without
cholera is not likely to produce it after they are dead.
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| Survivors have a strong
psychological need to identify lost loved ones and to
grieve for them in customary ways. Denying survivors the
right to carry out those rituals can add significantly
to mental health problems that occur after a disaster. |
An environmental epidemiologist
at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine reviewed
the scientific evidence on the issue in a recent article in
the Pan American Journal of Public Health. “The microorganisms
involved in decomposition are not the kind that cause disease.”
“And most viruses and bacteria that do cause disease
cannot survive very long in a dead body.” An exception
is the human immunodeficiency virus, HIV, which has been shown
to live up to 16 days in a corpse, but only under refrigeration.
He points out that blood-borne viruses, such as HIV and hepatitis
B and C, as well as tuberculosis and gastrointestinal infections,
do pose a slight risk for relief workers charged with handling
bodies. But the risk of contagion can be minimized with basic
precautions and proper hygiene.
One valid concern is
that fecal matter from decomposing bodies may contaminate
water. Getting clean water to people should be a high priority,
regardless of the source of contamination.
Despite the scientific
evidence, the belief that dead bodies spread disease remains
a chronic problem in disaster relief efforts. Alarming reports
in the media about the risk of massive disease outbreaks can
prompt authorities to rush to bury bodies in mass graves.
This adds to the survivors’ anguish and to the chaos.
It becomes one more blow to the affected population.
Seeking closure
There is a larger problem: mass burials
and cremations can make identification of remains all but
impossible and they prevent survivors from burying loved ones
according to local customs and beliefs. Survivors have a strong
psychological need to identify lost loved ones and to grieve
for them in customary ways. Every survivor’s hope is,
of course, that they will find someone alive. But when that
hope fades, there is a nearly universal human need to learn
the fate of a missing loved one and to somehow say good-bye.
This need must be recognized along with all the other needs
that people have in the aftermath of a disaster. This is why
following the recent tsunami disaster, countries with specialized
forensic identification teams and technology offered their
services to the affected countries in support of the disaster
recovery effort.
Failure to find and identify a victim
can have material consequences as well, leaving survivors
in a kind of legal limbo with respect to property ownership,
inheritance, or family benefits. In many cases, these problems
add to the economic hardship caused by the disaster itself.
Although authorities may feel public pressure to dispose of
bodies quickly, families, neighbors and immediate community
members are likely to resist efforts to bury victims en masse.
Following Hurricane Jeanne in Haiti last September, residents
of Gonaives reportedly stoned a truck trying to dump corpses
into a mass grave.
Much of the news coverage of the tsunami
catastrophe propagated the myth of dead bodies and epidemics,
particularly in the first days following the disaster. But
the coverage also reflected the enormous importance survivors
place on identifying lost loved ones. Media reports were filled
with stories and images of survivors searching desperately
in hospitals and morgues, perusing bulletin boards with victims’
photos, and posting pleas on the Internet for help in finding
lost loved ones. They also showed many instances in which
relief workers tried to facilitate this process.
In disaster and emergency situations
that produce mass casualties, dealing with large numbers of
corpses is a critical challenge for disaster relief. The approach
to this task should recognize the rights of survivors and
be based on scientific evidence, which is widely available,
rather than on unfounded fears.
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