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Self-assessment of the forensic value of dental records.
J Forensic Sci. 1999 Sep; 44(5):906-9.JF

Abstract

One of the most important aspects of a person's dental record may well prove to be it's potential value should the forensic dental identification of their remains become necessary. The better the quality of the antemortem dental records, the easier and faster the identification of the remains will be. The forensic dentist must be able to select identifying features by decoding the deceased's antemortem dental records. A study was conducted on two groups of dentists who were asked to self-assess the forensic dental value of the dental records maintained in their own practices. The three most frequently recorded identifying dental features, other than caries and restorations, were the presence of diastemas, displaced or rotated teeth, and dental anomalies. Surveyed dentists imbedded identifying information into the removable prosthetic devices fabricated for their patients an average of only 64% of the time. Only 56% of the two groups combined felt that their dental chartings and written records would be extremely useful in dental identifications. It is concluded that the quality of antemortem dental records available for comparison to postmortem remains varies from inadequate to extremely useful. Practicing dentists can become valuable members of the dental identification process by developing and maintaining standards of record keeping which would be valuable in restoring their patients' identity.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Harris County Medical Examiner's Office, Houston, TX, USA.No affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

10486939

Citation

Delattre, V F., and P G. Stimson. "Self-assessment of the Forensic Value of Dental Records." Journal of Forensic Sciences, vol. 44, no. 5, 1999, pp. 906-9.
Delattre VF, Stimson PG. Self-assessment of the forensic value of dental records. J Forensic Sci. 1999;44(5):906-9.
Delattre, V. F., & Stimson, P. G. (1999). Self-assessment of the forensic value of dental records. Journal of Forensic Sciences, 44(5), 906-9.
Delattre VF, Stimson PG. Self-assessment of the Forensic Value of Dental Records. J Forensic Sci. 1999;44(5):906-9. PubMed PMID: 10486939.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Self-assessment of the forensic value of dental records. AU - Delattre,V F, AU - Stimson,P G, PY - 1999/9/16/pubmed PY - 1999/9/16/medline PY - 1999/9/16/entrez SP - 906 EP - 9 JF - Journal of forensic sciences JO - J Forensic Sci VL - 44 IS - 5 N2 - One of the most important aspects of a person's dental record may well prove to be it's potential value should the forensic dental identification of their remains become necessary. The better the quality of the antemortem dental records, the easier and faster the identification of the remains will be. The forensic dentist must be able to select identifying features by decoding the deceased's antemortem dental records. A study was conducted on two groups of dentists who were asked to self-assess the forensic dental value of the dental records maintained in their own practices. The three most frequently recorded identifying dental features, other than caries and restorations, were the presence of diastemas, displaced or rotated teeth, and dental anomalies. Surveyed dentists imbedded identifying information into the removable prosthetic devices fabricated for their patients an average of only 64% of the time. Only 56% of the two groups combined felt that their dental chartings and written records would be extremely useful in dental identifications. It is concluded that the quality of antemortem dental records available for comparison to postmortem remains varies from inadequate to extremely useful. Practicing dentists can become valuable members of the dental identification process by developing and maintaining standards of record keeping which would be valuable in restoring their patients' identity. SN - 0022-1198 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/10486939/Self_assessment_of_the_forensic_value_of_dental_records_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -