Risk of occupational infection in forensic workers: a review

Author:

Dufayet Laurène1234,Langrand Jerome2,Ludes Bertrand45

Affiliation:

1. APHP - Hôpital Hôtel Dieu Unité Médico-Judiciaire, , 75004, Paris, France

2. APHP - Hôpital Fernand Widal Centre AntiPoison de Paris, Fédération de Toxicologie, , 75010, Paris , France

3. Inserm UMRS-1144 , Faculté de Pharmacie, 75006, Paris , France

4. Université de Paris-CNRS UMR 8045 Babel , 75005, Paris , France

5. Institut Médico-Légal , 75012, Paris , France

Abstract

Abstract The occupational risk of infection in forensic workers is a cause for concern, furthermore in the current context of the coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19) pandemic. In order to characterize this risk, we performed an extended review of the literature on occupational infections occurring in forensic workers. Seventeen articles were included. Direct contamination by aerosolization was the main mode of transmission reported, with 17 cases of tuberculosis. Indirect contamination was described as the mode of transmission in 10 cases (five cases of blastomycosis, two cases of tuberculosis, two Streptococcus pyogenes, and one case of human immunodeficiency virus). In all the other included cases, the mode of transmission was unknown. For two of them, the information provided was sufficient to link them to occupational exposure (one case of toxoplasmosis, one case of tuberculosis). For the remaining 10 cases, the link was uncertain (six cases of tuberculosis, three of hepatitis B, and one of COVID-19). Even if there is probably significant under-declaration, the number of infections linked to an occupational risk in forensic workers is not alarming, thanks to effective preventive measures.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,Anthropology,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous),Pathology and Forensic Medicine,Analytical Chemistry

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