Forensic odontology identification response to terrorist attacks in Paris November 2015

The terrorist attacks of November 2015 led to the immediate death of 129 victims admitted to the Legal and Forensic Medicine Institute of Paris, including 41 unidentified. During the Disaster Victim Identification (DVI) operations, 22 bodies were examined by the postmortem (PM) dental team with the...

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Main Authors: Steve Toupenay, Aida Ben Cheikh, Bertrand Ludes, Rufino Felizardo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2020-06-01
Series:Forensic Sciences Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20961790.2020.1778847
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spelling doaj-f705669fb2ef4dc39d15438cdbc80aba2021-07-06T12:16:10ZengTaylor & Francis GroupForensic Sciences Research2096-17902471-14112020-06-015321422210.1080/20961790.2020.17788471778847Forensic odontology identification response to terrorist attacks in Paris November 2015Steve Toupenay0Aida Ben Cheikh1Bertrand Ludes2Rufino Felizardo3UFR Odontologie, Université de ParisUFR Odontologie, Université de ParisUniversité de Paris, BABEL, CNRS, Institut Médico-Légal de ParisUFR Odontologie, Université de ParisThe terrorist attacks of November 2015 led to the immediate death of 129 victims admitted to the Legal and Forensic Medicine Institute of Paris, including 41 unidentified. During the Disaster Victim Identification (DVI) operations, 22 bodies were examined by the postmortem (PM) dental team with the aim of establishing PM odontograms. At the same time, the dental expert in the antemortem (AM) unit collected a large number of dental files, progressively filtered as the list of missing persons became reduced. Feedback from these events has highlighted the difficulties of implementing the DVI chain principles in a legal framework, published the day before the attacks, and also the technical complexity of collecting dental data on a week end of terror. The return on experience after this event has represented a paradigm shift on previous methods of DVI in Paris and even more in France. Indeed, the victim identification procedure was redesigned, integrating new technical means such as a CT scan directly on spot, allowing the extraction of maxillofacial data as soon as possible in order to support the PM dental examination team. Moreover, the National Dental Council proceeded to the overall remodeling of the dental identification unit, which is composed of trained members, from local, regional and national aspects. These forensic experts are dedicated, at the request of the legal authorities, to DVI operations and deployed throughout the country capable of managing AM and PM data. This unit aims also to share experiences and awareness-raising among health professionals and investigators in order to optimize a better submission of AM elements and also to enhance the major interest of odontology as a primary identifier in disaster.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20961790.2020.1778847forensic sciencesforensic odontologyterrorist attackforensic identificationdisaster victim identification
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Steve Toupenay
Aida Ben Cheikh
Bertrand Ludes
Rufino Felizardo
spellingShingle Steve Toupenay
Aida Ben Cheikh
Bertrand Ludes
Rufino Felizardo
Forensic odontology identification response to terrorist attacks in Paris November 2015
Forensic Sciences Research
forensic sciences
forensic odontology
terrorist attack
forensic identification
disaster victim identification
author_facet Steve Toupenay
Aida Ben Cheikh
Bertrand Ludes
Rufino Felizardo
author_sort Steve Toupenay
title Forensic odontology identification response to terrorist attacks in Paris November 2015
title_short Forensic odontology identification response to terrorist attacks in Paris November 2015
title_full Forensic odontology identification response to terrorist attacks in Paris November 2015
title_fullStr Forensic odontology identification response to terrorist attacks in Paris November 2015
title_full_unstemmed Forensic odontology identification response to terrorist attacks in Paris November 2015
title_sort forensic odontology identification response to terrorist attacks in paris november 2015
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Forensic Sciences Research
issn 2096-1790
2471-1411
publishDate 2020-06-01
description The terrorist attacks of November 2015 led to the immediate death of 129 victims admitted to the Legal and Forensic Medicine Institute of Paris, including 41 unidentified. During the Disaster Victim Identification (DVI) operations, 22 bodies were examined by the postmortem (PM) dental team with the aim of establishing PM odontograms. At the same time, the dental expert in the antemortem (AM) unit collected a large number of dental files, progressively filtered as the list of missing persons became reduced. Feedback from these events has highlighted the difficulties of implementing the DVI chain principles in a legal framework, published the day before the attacks, and also the technical complexity of collecting dental data on a week end of terror. The return on experience after this event has represented a paradigm shift on previous methods of DVI in Paris and even more in France. Indeed, the victim identification procedure was redesigned, integrating new technical means such as a CT scan directly on spot, allowing the extraction of maxillofacial data as soon as possible in order to support the PM dental examination team. Moreover, the National Dental Council proceeded to the overall remodeling of the dental identification unit, which is composed of trained members, from local, regional and national aspects. These forensic experts are dedicated, at the request of the legal authorities, to DVI operations and deployed throughout the country capable of managing AM and PM data. This unit aims also to share experiences and awareness-raising among health professionals and investigators in order to optimize a better submission of AM elements and also to enhance the major interest of odontology as a primary identifier in disaster.
topic forensic sciences
forensic odontology
terrorist attack
forensic identification
disaster victim identification
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20961790.2020.1778847
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