4.7 Article

Plague Transmission from Corpses and Carcasses

Journal

EMERGING INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 27, Issue 8, Pages 2033-2041

Publisher

CENTERS DISEASE CONTROL & PREVENTION
DOI: 10.3201/eid2708.200136

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Funding

  1. Research, Evidence and Development Initiative - UK aid from the UK government [300342104]

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By analyzing the literature, there was no direct evidence found to prove the transmission of Yersinia pestis from human corpses and animal carcasses, but it was concluded that pneumonic plague may be transmitted through intensive handling of the body, and bubonic plague may be transmitted through blood-to-blood contact with a corpse.
Knowing whether human corpses can transmit plague will inform policies for handling the bodies of those who have died of the disease. We analyzed the literature to evaluate risk for transmission of Yersinia pestis, the causative agent of plague, from human corpses and animal carcasses. Because we could not find direct evidence of transmission, we described a transmission pathway and assessed the potential for transmission at each step. We examined 3 potential sources of infection: body fluids of living plague patients, infected corpses and carcasses, and body fluids of infected corpses. We concluded that pneumonic plague can be transmitted by intensive handling of the corpse or carcass, presumably through the inhalation of respiratory droplets, and that bubonic plague can be transmitted by blood-to-blood contact with the body fluids of a corpse or carcass. These findings should inform precautions taken by those handling the bodies of persons or animals that died of plague.

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