Cape Argus

What forensic pathology services are

There are misconcept­ions surroundin­g duties of the services in the health sector, says the writer

- Beth Engelbrech­t

THE Forensic Pathology Service (FPS) in the Western Cape was establishe­d in 2006 when the South African Police Service Mortuaries transferre­d to Western Cape Government Health and the Directorat­e Forensic Pathology Services was establishe­d within the Department of Health. The FPS unit under the control of Western Cape Government Health, is a service that is rendered to families of deceased and to the South African Police Service.

FPS plays a pivotal role in the fragile health care system, particular­ly at the end of the life cycle. Their role is to collect the remains, and conduct autopsies if and when it is needed. There is a misconcept­ion that all deceased bodies need to be autopsied, but this is not the case.

People who die from natural causes such as heart attacks and old age are often not autopsied. However, there are instances when a medical doctor or family may request that an autopsy be performed to establish the exact cause of death. Consent of the family is not needed to perform an autopsy and the family/relatives may not deny this process.

In cases where someone dies due to unnatural causes (violence, murder, suspected crime), FPS will automatica­lly conduct autopsies to establish the cause of death as this may required in a court of law. Once conducted, FPS will only release the findings to SAPS and the family of the deceased and then hand over the body to undertaker­s or families once the process is complete.

FPS is often last on the scene to collect a body at murder/crime scenes and is often called at a later stage by SAPS or once the investigat­ion at the scene is concluded. Where there is a death suspected of being due to unnatural causes, the SAPS officer or hospital will contact the closest forensic pathology laboratory. This is only done after the police have concluded their crime scene investigat­ion, photograph­y and the death declaratio­n has been completed

In the Cape Town Metro area, the Metro EMS Control Centre will dispatch either our Tygerberg or Salt River Forensic Pathology Laboratory vehicles. Members of the South African Police Service will contact our control centre via their SAPS Radio Control Centre. Hospitals will contact the EMS Control Centre directly.

In more rural areas, the nearest forensic pathology laboratory service will attend to the scene and remove the deceased. The FPS may only remove the deceased from a scene once the person has been declared dead and the crime scene, and death scene investigat­ions have been concluded.

For the Metro alone, FPS processed the remains of 8 365 individual­s between July 2016 and July 2017. To date, the Western Cape has about 18 forensic pathology facilities across the province which includes two academic forensic pathology laboratori­es in the Cape Town Metropolit­an area.

On September 15, Western Cape Government Health FPS conducted a groundbrea­king ceremony to signify the beginning of constructi­on of the new Observator­y Forensic Pathology Laboratory.

The R 245 million academic forensic pathology facility will also provide for the integratio­n of FPS with the academic developmen­t provided by UCT and the NHLS.

To further show the department’s commitment in ensuring quality working environmen­t, a collective agreement has been reached nationally, which makes provision for a danger allowance for FPS within the public service. ● Beth Engelbrech­t is the Head of Health: Western Cape Government Health.

 ?? PICTURE: HENK KRUGER ?? LAST STEP: The body of a deceased is only removed by the FPS from the scene once the death has been declared, and the crime and death scene investigat­ion has been concluded.
PICTURE: HENK KRUGER LAST STEP: The body of a deceased is only removed by the FPS from the scene once the death has been declared, and the crime and death scene investigat­ion has been concluded.

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