"The body must be treated with dignity and respect. On no account should a body... Be allowed to be carried on shoulders, or strung on a pole, or in any manner that compromises dignity of the dead," the notification signed by Health and Family Welfare Secretary Arti Ahuja said.
The body should be carried on a stretcher or a cot and it should be kept appropriately in a designated place till all formalities are disposed of, the guideline said.
The Odisha government asked all district collectors, SPs, CDMOs and other authorities to ensure that the guideline is followed in letter and spirit.
The guideline was prepared keeping in mind three situations - patients expiring during treatment, brought dead cases and unclaimed bodies.
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For removal of bodies from hospital, the guideline said the person(s) carrying the body must show "death slip" to the staff or the security personnel.
The medical officers will file certificate on cause of death in the hospital. And the Medical Officer will also issue the death slip to the next of kin of the deceased who take the body, it said.
"The deceased persons' families should not be made to wait unnecessarily for completion of formalities. Rather the help desk and para-medical staff should be sensitised appropriately to help the family in the situation," it said.
"In case, where the family asks for a dead body carrier, the collector should give funds as per GA Department revised guidelines of Chief Minister's Relief Fund," it said, adding coordination between the collector and SP is also required for proper disposal of body.
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