Yorkshire Post

Bodies held at city hospital ‘were not stored correctly’

- Leigh Jones NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT

BODIES held at a Yorkshire hospital showed signs of decomposit­ion after not being stored properly, according to the regulator responsibl­e for human bodies and tissues.

Reports from the Human Tissue Authority (HTA), the public body in charge of human tissue and organs, said of one case last year at Leeds General Infirmary: “The inspection team noted a body that had been in storage for 70 days that had not been placed into frozen storage despite being released by the coroner.

“This body showed signs of decomposit­ion and had soiled shrouding.

Official HTA guidance says that bodies should be moved into frozen storage after 30 days in fridges or before, depending on the condition of the body.

“A second body had been in storage for 47 days, had also been the subject of a coroner’s release notificati­on and had not been placed into frozen storage and showed signs of decomposit­ion,” the report says.

Inspectors also found there was no cleaning schedule for the body store at the hospital, and “the door from the visitors area to the staff office is not fitted with a lock… This allows potential access to the main mortuary.”

Dr Magnus Harrison, chief medical officer at Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, said: “Our aim is to provide a safe and dignified service in our mortuaries for people who have died, and unfortunat­ely in this instance, this was not the case.

“We now have improved systems in place including better communicat­ion with our coroner and respective partners to ensure this doesn’t happen again. Duty of Candour procedures are followed when next of kin informatio­n is available.”

The Health Service Journal (HSJ), which first reported on the issue, said it had found at least 10 cases across the country since 2022 where inspectors discovered bodies had started to deteriorat­e.

A spokeswoma­n for the HTA said: “The management of the deceased in some licensed mortuaries was identified as a concern through the HTA on-site inspection process. The deceased should be stored at temperatur­es that preserve their condition and there should be sufficient storage provision and alternativ­es in place if needed. We expect all licensed establishm­ents to be compliant with our standards and ensure the dignity of the deceased is maintained. When we find shortfalls we work with establishm­ents to ensure an action plan for improvemen­t is put in place, lessons are learnt and the issue is escalated within the establishm­ent where necessary.”

Elsewhere, at King’s College Hospital in London, inspectors reported “critical” shortfalls in 2022, with mouldy and infested conditions for body storage.

The report added: “Whilst these bodies were subject to regular condition checking, signs of deteriorat­ion were present.”

A spokeswoma­n for King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust said: “Following an inspection report in 2022 by the HTA, we have significan­tly increased the size of our mortuary provision.”

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