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Decedent care is a fundamental responsibility of every hospital — and one that reflects directly on institutional values, staff culture, and family trust. The equipment, workflow, and facilities supporting hospital decedent care must function reliably, comply with regulatory standards, and uphold the dignity of patients and families at their most vulnerable moment. The Hospital Decedent Care Planner™ by American Mortuary Coolers provides hospital administrators, nursing leaders, and facility managers with the framework to assess, plan, and improve every dimension of their decedent care program.
A comprehensive hospital decedent care program encompasses: the process from pronouncement of death through transfer to the morgue, refrigerated body storage that meets regulatory and accreditation requirements, positive identification systems that maintain chain of custody throughout, family notification and support processes, release of remains to funeral homes or medical examiner, and documentation and quality improvement processes for decedent care events.
The first equipment need is reliable, dignified transport from the patient care unit to the morgue. American Mortuary Coolers supplies covered mortuary stretchers and transport systems designed for hospital corridor use, with the discretion and reliability that patient care environments require.
Hospital mortuary refrigeration must be sized for your average and peak decedent census, maintained at required temperatures with continuous monitoring, and accessible to authorized staff with appropriate access control. American Mortuary Coolers designs hospital morgue refrigeration systems that meet all these requirements.
Positive identification through the decedent care process is non-negotiable. Body identification bands, toe tags, and documented chain of custody procedures must be supported by appropriate supplies and workflow design.
When families request bedside viewing before morgue transfer, or when the morgue serves as a family viewing location, appropriate infrastructure is required. American Mortuary Coolers can advise on the space and equipment requirements for family-facing decedent care activities.
Hospital decedent care programs must comply with: state health department regulations for body storage temperature and handling, Joint Commission standards for mortuary services, OSHA requirements for staff working with decedents, and internal hospital policies for event documentation and quality review.
The Joint Commission requires hospitals to have policies for the handling, storage, and release of remains, including identification procedures and refrigeration standards. Contact us for guidance on equipment that supports Joint Commission compliance.
Covered mortuary stretchers with discrete transport pouches allow decedent transport through hospital corridors without identification of the nature of the transport. American Mortuary Coolers supplies covered transport stretchers designed for this purpose.
Most standards require 34–40°F. Continuous temperature monitoring with alarm notification is required by most accreditation standards.
American Mortuary Coolers supports hospital decedent care programs with the full range of equipment, planning expertise, and regulatory knowledge needed to operate a compliant, dignified, and efficient morgue program. We’ve worked with hospitals of all types and sizes across the United States — from critical access hospitals to major academic medical centers.
Contact our planning team for a consultation on your hospital’s decedent care equipment and program needs.
Call: 1-888-792-9315 | MyMortuaryCooler.com | sales@funeralsourceone.com