Introduction

The novel coronavirus (severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2, SARS-CoV-2) is a highly contagious virus that was first reported in Wuhan, China, in December 2019, and then spread rapidly to many countries all over the world. Most infected people have an asymptomatic or a mild atypical respiratory disease (so called coronavirus disease or COVID-19), but about 20% develop a more severe clinical diagnosis with a high mortality rate. Italy and the United States are among the countries with the highest number of COVID-19 cases globally Fig. 1 [1]. At present (July 2, 2020), the number of COVID-19 cases is 240,760 in Italy and 2,699,658 in the United States. According to the Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE) at John Hopkins University, the number of deaths that are believed to have been caused by SARS-CoV-2 are 34,818 in Italy and 128,677 in the United States [2, 3]. As we explain later, governments collect their statistics differently, making any cross-border comparison, be it infections, recoveries, or deaths, imprecise.

Fig. 1
figure 1

Comparison of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2 or COVID-19) cases reported for the United States (top panel) and Italy (lower panel). The first reported U.S. case occurred on January 22, 2020 and is shown along with the case numbers for both countries for 1 February 2020, 1 March 2020, 1 April 2020, 1 May 2020, and 1 June 2020. The color increases in intensity as the number of cases increases in each country. Data were sourced from the interactive web-based dashboard hosted by the Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE) at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA [1]

The COVID-19 pandemic has caused crucial adjustments in many fields of medicine, specifically in the medicolegal field. SARS-CoV-2 is categorized as a hazard group 3 (HG3) coronavirus. This pathogen requires four areas of attention: i) risk assessment, ii) pathological determinations, iii) universal standard preventative measures, and iv) standard operating procedures for handling specific HG3 organisms. If universal preventative measures are effectively used, they mitigate against inaccurate or incomplete data used in risk assessment. Forensic practices related to performing autopsies have been largely affected by the COVID-19 pandemic due to the highly contagious nature of the virus. Autopsy is essential in order to determine the cause of death in decedents who test positive for SARS-CoV-2 and to discriminate between those who died with COVID-19 and who died from COVID-19.

It is known that the virus is detectable in air for up to three hours, and it is also detectable for up to four hours on metal, up to 24 hours on cardboard, and up to three days on plastic and stainless steel [4]. Many items used in a typical morgue potentially contain viral particles that may have been shed from a body to surrounding instruments and equipment. For example, body bags that are used to transport decedents are made of thick plastic with a full-length zipper. Autopsy tables are typically made of stainless steel, and many of the instruments used in the morgue are made of plastic and steel. Without proper decontamination after each autopsy, the morgue has the potential to be teeming with many infectious COVID-19 particles.

Postmortem examinations provide valuable information about SARS-CoV-2 pathology and physiology, bringing about useful clinical and epidemiological managements that are anticipated to be effective in guiding therapy and orienting patient care [5]. Equally important, postmortem samples may solve unanswered questions, for instance the effects of the infection on the lungs and the involvement of other organs [6,7,8]. Here we will review our current knowledge of autopsies in the era of COVID-19 and consider the underlying medicolegal investigations to explain the diverse symptomatology, specifically focusing on differences between the United States and Italy.

Overview of medical examiner/coroner systems

Globally, the role of the medical examiner in most countries today has evolved in some form from the vestiges of the medieval English coroner system and the European continental system under Roman law, which investigated the cause of death in unusual circumstances [9]. Interestingly, the intersection of medical and legal jurisdiction in the adequate fulfillment of duties associated with the work of a medical examiner has long been a cause of public concern. For example, even today in some countries, including some states and counties in the United States (U.S.), laws pertaining to the training and readiness of individuals for entry into the medical examiner position are not well defined. Public concern regarding possible inadequate medical training of medical examiners drove the evolution of this field in the United States. For instance, at the turn of the nineteenth century, public opinion facilitated the advancement of technical and medico-jurisdictional preparation for medical examiners. This movement culminated in the United States in the creation of the 1954 Model Post-Mortem Examinations Act (the Act) [10, 11]. It was meant to provide a means whereby there was assurance of better competence in determining causes of death in cases of criminal liability. The Act was created but it was never enacted into state law or administrative code. It did, however, stimulate the change of approximately half of the coroner positions to medical examiners.

The Act not only defined the modern role of medical examiners, but it also served to contextualize that role in the setting of the modern theory and practice of public health and public health law. For example, the preface to the Act states that “the purpose of the Model Post-Mortem Examinations Act is to provide a means whereby greater competence can be assured in determining causes of death where criminal liability may be involved. Experience has shown that many elected coroners are not well trained in the field of pathology, and the Act would set up in each state an Office headed by a trained pathologist, this Office to have jurisdiction over post-mortem examinations for criminal purposes. The Office would, in general, supersede the authority of Coroner's Offices in this field” [12]. This definition laid the groundwork for distinguishing, at least in the United States, the medical examiners' roles from that of the coroners’. However, even today, a great amount of overlap exists between coroners and medical examiners and due to the federalist-state system, the states are free to determine and independently develop certain aspects of their death investigation systems.

U.S. medical examiner/coroner system

In describing the death investigation systems in place today, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) mentions that states may have either medical examiners or coroners’ offices or even a combination of both systems, with 16 states and Washington DC having a centralized medical examiner system, 6 states a county or district-based medical examiner system, 14 states a combination of medical examiners and coroners that is administered at a county level, 14 other states with a county-, district-, or parish-based coroner system, and 25 states with an official State Medical Examiner [13]. This list serves to illustrate a very important aspect of the administration and working of the death investigation system in the U.S., namely that of an amalgamation of a centralized and decentralized system, where some states administer death investigation through a State Office, while others have codified this system at the county, district, or parish level. For example, in Maryland and in Oklahoma, there are statewide agencies [14, 15], while in Virginia’s medical examiner system, there are four district offices [16]. The Oklahoma Office of the Chief Medical Examiner (OCME) is a statewide medical examiner death investigation system. This is significant to public health and from an epidemiological point of view, due to the variation in reporting and data collection systems regarding death cases, is further compounded by the differences in state laws that govern postmortem death investigations. For example, although there are differences in state laws that determine which deaths may be investigated by the medical examiner or coroner’s office, the Medical Examiner’s and Coroner’s Handbook on Death Registration and Fetal Death Reporting published by the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) includes directions for investigation of deaths from disease when “the death occurred suddenly and unexpectantly, the decedent was not being treated by a physician, or the death was unattended,” helping link the work of the death investigation system to aspects of the public health system [17]. In 2006, the National Association of Medical Examiners (NAME) enacted Forensic Autopsy Performance Standards into the Accreditation Program [18]. These standards established consensus on definitions and the standardization of techniques such as histology, radiology, toxicology, and written reports.

Italian medical examiner/coroner system

Dissimilar to the U.S. system, in Italy there is no official death investigation agency such as a coroner or medical examiner system that investigates and certifies causes of death. The first Italian legislation about death investigation was issued in 1910, with the “Circolare Fani” [19]. This Ministerial Circular describes in detail the minimum standards for a forensic autopsy. Before that, there were no standardized procedures or rules for forensic autopsies in place. The Circular was written thanks to the work of Prof. Lombroso who, in 1898, inaugurated the first national meeting of Legal Medicine concerning cadaveric examination. The law mandated that two qualified doctors are needed for each autopsy and this practice is still implemented in current criminal casework. No further laws governing the matter were provided after the “Circolare Fani”. Since 2011, a new death certificate, which conforms to European rules dealing with statistical recording (Rule EU 1338/08, 16.12.2008) and was designed by the Italian Institute of Statistics (ISTAT) based on previous Italian rules of law, (Royal Law 1265/34 and Law 285/90) has been in use. Prior to 2011, each Italian death certificate consisted of two categories (natural deaths and violent deaths). Currently, for all natural deaths, disease, injury, and intoxication conditions related to the immediate, intermediate and underlying causes of deaths are synopsized along with corresponding postmortem intervals (PMIs). Non-natural deaths (fall, hanging, gunshot, and intoxication) are documented to clarify the manner of death.

In Italy, forensic autopsies are performed under one of two different statutes: 1) judicial autopsies (ordered for forensic purposes) and 2) nonjudicial autopsies (ordered for sanitary reasons). These kinds of autopsies may also serve to answer epidemiological questions, as may be found in cases of infectious diseases, environmental problems, etc. [20]. Nonjudicial autopsies which are also known as “riscontro diagnostic,” which is Italian for “diagnostic validation,” are regulated by the National Health Service and are requested when the cause of death is unknown or when confirmatory diagnostic investigations are needed. In the U.S., the manner of death is classified as accident, homicide, natural, suicide, or undetermined. In contrast to U.S. death certificates, Italian death certificates do not offer an undetermined manner of death.

It is a legal requirement that, when suspicion of a crime arises during a nonjudicial autopsy, the doctor must stop their activity and inform the Judicial Authority [21]. Judicial autopsies are requested by the Prosecutor or by the Court, if it appears that one’s death is related to a crime. This is to enable evidence to be collected. The decision whether or not a judicial autopsy has to be performed is left to the discretion of the Prosecutor, based on preliminary information collected by the police and/or by a medical doctor. Indeed, in every case of unexpected, sudden, unexplained or, above all, violent death, as well as in potential medical malpractice cases, the physician who is asked to fill the death certificates must inform the Judicial Authority [22]. Autopsies, in most cases, are carried out by medical doctors specialized in Legal Medicine employed at University or Public Hospitals, or by other qualified physicians. The Prosecutor usually refers to a Legal Medicine Department of a University or Hospital. According to Italian law, any qualified, registered doctors may be called upon to perform a forensic autopsy, even without any proven specialized training or technical experience in the field [23].

The forensic investigation of a medical malpractice case should be performed, in Italy as an overt deontological due, by a team composed of a trained forensic pathologist and a clinician specialized in the involved branch [24]. The Italian criminal justice system is a sort of semi-adversarial system. Not only does the Prosecutor charge his consultant with performing the autopsy and all the necessary verifications, but also the person under investigation and the victim's next of kin (the injured party) can appoint a forensic pathologist as a consultant to stand in at the autopsy and discuss the case with the Prosecutor’s consultant [25]. Despite the European recommendations [20], and unlike in the United States, in Italy forensic autopsies are not mandatory, even when the cause and/or manner of death are unclear, or when the death may be connected to a crime. Law enforcement officers sometimes decide if an external examination is enough for the death investigation or if a forensic autopsy has to be performed [25]. Due to costs, a problematic declining autopsy rate is occurring in Italy, as well as in other countries [26]. Despite rising costs, autopsy remains the only way to determine with certainty the cause, manner, and time of death. Another problem is that, often, too much time lapses before a judicial autopsy is done, due to the time-consuming obligation to serve notice on every party involved.

The role of the forensic pathologist in infectious disease surveillance

The death investigation system serves as a significant conduit for epidemiological data collection and as an important sentinel system in the event of mass pandemics of fatal diseases as in the case of the COVID-19. Determination of the cause of death of mass causalities of disease outbreaks in localized areas of the world and the spread of this information globally are important early warning systems that regulate public health and the public health response including state allocation of resources and policy development.

Infectious disease surveillance in the United States

Further evidence of the linkage and interdependency of the public health and death investigation systems emanates from an examination of the death reporting and surveillance systems in the United States today. Such systems include “vital statistics,” “notifiable disease reporting,” “sentinel surveillance,” “surveys,” “registries,” and “administrative data collection systems” [27]. An important example of the impact of the death investigation systems on public health and epidemiology is the vital statistics reporting and database systems. In the U.S., the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) publishes vital statistics data and the National Death Index from data collected from all 50 states. This reporting system includes the vital statistics rapid release system with quarterly mortality, natality, and infant mortality provisional estimates which serve as sentinel systems for early warnings regarding disease outbreaks [28]. In fact, the National Vital Statistics System developed an official COVID-19 death data and reporting guidance with daily, weekly, and state-wide updates on coronavirus-related deaths [29].

In 2007, Nolte et al. created a medical examiner/coroner (ME/C) model surveillance system, which they called Med-X designed to “recognize fatal infections of public health importance and deaths due to bioterrorism” using prospective evaluation of death data from New Mexico medical examiner and coroner jurisdictions between 2000 and 2002 focusing on infectious diseases-related mortality [30]. Since then, multiple efforts have concentrated on the expansion of this program as it is based on accepted standards for autopsy performance, diagnostic testing, and public health reporting. One such instance is the effort to assess the capacity of national ME/C offices to carry out infectious disease surveillance via the administration of an internet-based questionnaire through the National Association of Medical Examiners which determined that of those ME/C offices that responded “97% indicated an interest in a medical examiner–based surveillance system for infectious diseases; 13% currently identify and report cases through the Med-X system” [31].

Historically, ME/C surveillance data has provided important information regarding the spread of infections in the events of unusual and sudden mass deaths. These data have traditionally served as significant sources for disease surveillance in outbreaks such as the 2009 H1N1 pandemic in Minnesota, New Mexico, and Oregon, where “surveillance using unexplained death and medical examiner data allowed for detection of 34 (18%) pandemic (H1N1) 2009-associated deaths that were not detected by hospital-based surveillance [32]”.

The central role of the ME/C office in investigative infectious disease surveillance and public health reporting is perhaps best exemplified by the events associated with the unfolding of the 1994 Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome (HPS) as reported in the August 5th, 1994, Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report of the CDC. It was reported that a 22-year old Rhode Island man died of acute respiratory distress syndrome approximately five hours after hospitalization which resulted in the engagement of ME/C offices. Postmortem tissue antigen and blood antibodies analysis pointed to hantavirus infection by Muerto Canyon Virus (MCV). Subsequent tracking data and further analysis demonstrated that by July 1994, 83 HPS cases had been identified in the U.S. [32].

Similarly, medical examiners in the United States played a central role in discovering and identifying the West Nile Virus (WNV) infections in New York in 1999. Sampson et al. reported the discovery of deaths associated with WNV infections by postmortem examination of tissue samples through the use of immunohistochemistry (IHC) and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technologies in New York City in the late summer of 1999. It was reported that the fatalities occurred in persons with a mean age of 81.5 years, with symptoms upon first reporting which included fever and profound muscle weakness. ME/C based autopsy disclosed encephalitis in two instances of deaths and revealed meningoencephalitis in the remaining two cases [33]. WNV was first discovered globally in 1937 in Africa, and following this 1999 discovery in New York City, it has spread across the United States.

Infectious disease surveillance in Italy

In Italy, infectious disease surveillance is based on the mandatory reporting system [34] that involves the compulsory reporting by physicians to the National Health Service in cases of diagnoses of an established number of diseases. Recently introduced European regulations, establish a new definition of cases in which it is necessary to report transmissible disease to the EU surveillance network and the obligation to collect, analyze, validate, and submit data [35]. The Department of Infectious Diseases prevents diseases due to infectious agents (viruses, bacteria, fungi, and parasites) through the study of human pathogens, host immune responses, and treatment of infections. This department is involved in all the activities related to diagnosis, surveillance, control, epidemiology, and advice in infectious diseases [36]. For example, in Italy, several national and regional surveillance systems are used to monitor seasonal influenza cases. The national surveillance network, InfluNET, used during the H1N1 pandemic, monitored data from the “sentinel physicians” system, which consisted of a national network of approximately 1000 primary care physicians and pediatricians in the 21 regions and autonomous provinces [37]. Incidence rates were therefore not based on consultations but on the served population of each reporting physician each week. Another example regards MNV, that, in Italy, is managed through an annually revised plan aiming to reduce the risk of transmission to humans by detecting viral circulation early and triggering both vector-control and substances of human origin (SoHO) safety measures [38]. The plan, coordinated by the Italian Ministry of Health, defines data flow processes to facilitate a rapid response among relevant stakeholders. Regarding the infection by hantavirus, Italy participates in the European surveillance system for this disease, reporting its rare cases [39].

The impact of the COVID-19 emergency on medicolegal practices

The outbreak of COVID-19 created a global health crisis that has had a deep impact on medicolegal practices in the U.S. and Italy including autopsy recommendations and forensic pathology activity (Table 1). On January 30, 2020, the WHO declared the outbreak a public health emergency of international concern, warning that “all countries should be prepared for containment” [40]. Due to the large and unexpected number of COVID-19 cases, there is a critical need for swabs for COVID-19 RNA testing and personal protective equipment (PPE) such as gloves, goggles, and masks [41,42,43,44,45,46]. Additionally, the provisional recruitment of new healthcare specialist personnel is required to meet the demand for COVID-19 patient care [47]. During the COVID-19 pandemic, due to the high number of deaths, governments have had limited choices in handling the large volume of bodies. In countries such as the U. S. and Italy, temporary mortuaries big enough to accommodate thousands of bodies have been assembled. Autopsies have been generally discouraged due to the risk of further spreading the disease through the handling and dissection of bodies [48]. There is still, however, a paucity of data regarding the persistence of SARS-CoV-2 in bodies, as well as concerning the reliability of swabbing methods in human remains. To the best of our knowledge, to date, there has been no scientific confirmation of disease transmission from a body to an medical examiner after an autopsy of a COVID-19 case, even if, in April, a published article [49] was misinterpreted by the media [50, 51]. As the coronavirus pandemic has unfolded, forensic pathologists have played (and are still playing) an important role because they are called on to investigate and determine the causes of deaths that are unexpected or unnatural, including deaths that occur at home.

Table 1 Impact of the COVID-19 emergency in the United States and Italy. Comparison between the United States and Italy of COVID-19-related data and routine forensic pathologist activity

On January 3, 2020 the U.S. declared the COVID-19 outbreak a public health emergency [52]. Although by that date, there were only seven known cases in the U.S., the United States Department of Health and Human Service and CDC reported there was a likelihood of further cases appearing in the country. On April 5, 2020 the Council for State and Territorial Epidemiologists issued an interim novel coronavirus position statement [53] that provided a COVID-19 case definition and made COVID-19 a nationally notifiable disease. If family or friends say the person had symptoms consistent with COVID-19, the coroner's office could decide to do a nasal swab to test for the virus (this happens, for example, in Richland County, S.C. and in the San Francisco area). Nasal swabbing was typically performed on decedents who manifested one or more of the following clinical symptoms: exposure to an infected person, elevated temperature, cough of respiratory discharge, loss of taste and smell, diarrhea, and/or chest pain. The following comorbidity information was also collected: diabetes, hypertension, obesity, dementia, etc. Medical personnel are required to immediately report to their local or state’s health department in the event of the positive identification of a case with known or suspected COVID-19. More recently, the equipment gradually became more widely available and is now easier for pathologists to perform postmortem tests. Currently, months after the emergence of COVID-19 in the United States, the access to test kits and testing materials such as nasal swabs have become readily available.

According to CDC recommendation [54], specific contact and airborne precautions should be followed during autopsy for someone who has known or suspected COVID-19 infection. Many of the procedures are consistent with existing guidelines for safe work practices in the autopsy setting. In particular, in cases of SARS-CoV-2 positivity, autopsies must be performed in rooms especially equipped against airborne infections, with negative pressure, and 6-12 air changes per hour.

Italy was the first European country to have a serious outbreak of COVID-19. The infection was confirmed to have spread to Italy on January 31, 2020, when two Chinese tourists tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 in Rome [55]. A circular issued by the Italian Ministry of Health on March 9, 2020 provided an update and replacement of the previous ones and outlined the definition of a suspected, probable, and confirmed case of COVID-19 [56]. Deaths in hospitals are generally assessed as natural, though some EU member states have issued their own statements regarding COVID-19. In Italy, death in the context of COVID-19 should be indicated on the death certificate [57]. It is necessary to indicate if the infection is only suspected or if there is a confirmed antemortem diagnosis of coronavirus. It is also recommended that it is indicated on the death certificate if the virus is directly or indirectly connected to the death, or if the death happened from other causes (for example, from a trauma) in a patient with a confirmed positive COVID-19 swab.

In accordance with the directions issued by the Ministry of Health in its circular published in February 2020 [58], all certifications recording COVID-19 as the cause of death should be accompanied by an opinion of the Istituto Superiore di Sanità (ISS). A working group has therefore been created to study the cause of death of patients who tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 [59]. In most cases, a postmortem examination is not required unless other circumstances make it necessary. Every single case is evaluated based on medical records and the ISTAT death files, recording the patients’ causes of death. Data are collected on a web platform (http://covid-19.iss.it), which is also used for the national epidemiological and virological surveillance of COVID-19 cases in Italy (coordinated by the ISS and established by the Ministry of Health [60]). Furthermore, COVID-19 patients have characteristic chest radiographs that assist in interpretation when external examinations are the only analyses performed.

On April 1, 2020, the Italian Ministry of Health [61] published an official document on autopsies during the SARS-CoV-2 epidemic. In conformity with most of the International recommendations, this circular stated that: i) for the entire period of the emergency phase, autopsies or postmortem diagnostic studies should be avoided in cases of COVID-19; ii) the Judicial Authority will evaluate the possibility of limiting the assessment to the external inspection of the body, in all cases where an autopsy is not strictly necessary for forensic reasons; iii) the Public Health Departments of each Region will give the criteria to limit the execution of autopsy in case it is necessary to find out the cause of death. It is not allowed to perform autopsies only for scientific purposes; and iv) autopsies can only be carried out in rooms with adequate safety conditions. Standard autopsy protection, together with specific personal protection equipment, should be used (i.e. double surgical gloves interposed with a layer of cut-proof gloves, impermeable long-sleeve gown/apron, goggles or face shield, shoe covers, and surgical cap). Respiratory protection consists of a disposable N-95 or higher respirator. All procedures that may produce aerosol should be avoided. In Italy, there are very few autopsy rooms equipped with the recommended safety standards and it is not possible to perform COVID-19 autopsies in the vast majority of Legal Medicine Departments.

As a matter of fact, in less than two months, medicolegal autopsies have drastically decreased. For example, in two of the most important Institutes of Legal Medicine in Lombardy, in March and in April, the decrease in the number of autopsies being undertaken was approximately 70% [47, 62] compared to the same period in previous years. As the contagion progressed in Italy, stricter rules for the management of the deceased were established [61]. Bodies were not stripped and coated. The transfer of open caskets was prohibited and coffins are sealed immediately. Funeral ceremonies have also been banned, in order to avoid mass gatherings.

Despite these difficulties, North Italy has conducted one of the largest studies regarding the histological analysis of lung tissues of 38 cases who died from COVID-19 and this study was recently submitted for publication. A minimally invasive protocol was adopted. The main relevant finding regards the presence of thrombi in small arterial vessels. This important observation fits into the clinical context of coagulopathy which predominates in these patients and which has become one of the main targets of therapy [6].

Conclusion

In conclusion, in Italy and in the U.S. the current government regulations, issued in order to limit the spread of the SARS-CoV-2, have been established to ensure the safety of medicolegal personnel. However, the regulations have, in some cases, precluded the possibility of obtaining precious data about the pathophysiology of the infection. A strong effort by the authorities in the U.S. and Italy has been made in order to facilitate the execution of postmortem examinations, as the data derived from such activities are very likely to be of paramount importance in improving patient management and prevention of the disease. As stated throughout this review, there are marked differences between autopsy procedures in the U.S. and Italy. For example, in both countries, autopsies are performed in “safe” autopsy rooms with all the required personal protective measures; however, airborne infection isolated rooms are more difficult to find in all Italian Legal Medicine Centers. The death investigation systems in both countries are successful in that they have provided accurate data for infectious disease surveillance across a variety of public platforms. On an ongoing basis, the National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System (NNDSS) in the U.S. helps the CDC monitor reports of infectious and non-infectious diseases which include a list of about 120 diseases, while the Sistema Nazionale di Sorveglianza Della Mortalità Giornaliera (SiSMG) helps the Ministry of Health in Italy.

Autopsies play a clinical role in criminal cases, but should be more appropriately restricted to research studies, where the collection of cadaver samples may provide new insights into organ damage caused by SARS-CoV-2. One of the obstacles for medicolegal investigations related to conducting autopsies during the COVID-19 pandemic is the tremendous number of cases that must be processed. Furthermore, medical examiners must definitively determine the cause of death in COVID-19-positive cases to discriminate between those who died with COVID-19 along with other disease processes from those who actually died from COVID-19 pathogenesis. The manner of death, sometimes referred to as circumstances of death, is also reported on death certificates in COVID-19 cases. Another obstacle is that natural deaths are generally due solely or almost entirely to the aging process or due to disease [63]. However, in the cases of deaths caused by COVID-19 infection, the manner of death is almost always reported as a natural death. In conclusion, recommendations related to SARS-CoV-2 medicolegal investigations in the U.S. and Italy require stronger regulations by government authorities to facilitate accurate completion of postmortem examinations that include upper and lower respiratory tract swabs from each lung, the use of appropriate PPE, and proper infection control practices.

Key points

  1. 1.

    Medicolegal activities involving autopsies have been greatly affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.

  2. 2.

    Forensic pathologists play a pivotal role in informing infectious disease surveillance.

  3. 3.

    During the COVID-19 pandemic, there is a risk of spreading the disease through the handling and dissection of bodies.

  4. 4.

    The collection of cadaver samples may provide new insights into organ damage caused by COVID-19.