Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a) In
order to ensure the maximum inhibition of pathogenic organisms in the dead
human body, the following minimum standards of performance shall be required of
each licensed embalmer in the State of Texas in each instance in which he or
she is authorized or required to embalm a dead human body.
(1) Embalming shall be performed only by
embalmers licensed by the Commission, in properly equipped and licensed
establishments, or in the event of a disaster of major proportions, in
facilities designated by a Medical Examiner, Coroner, or state health official.
Only three types of people may under certain circumstances assist licensed
embalmers in embalming: provisional licensed embalmers under the personal
supervision of a licensed embalmer; students who are enrolled in an accredited
school of mortuary science working on a case intended toward completion of the
student's clinical requirements, under the personal supervision of a licensed
embalmer and with written permission to assist the embalmer from a family
member or the person responsible for making arrangements for final disposition;
and, in the event of a disaster of major proportions and with the prior
approval of the Executive Director, embalmers licensed in another state as long
as they are working with or under the general supervision of a person licensed
as an embalmer in this state.
(2)
Embalmers are required to utilize all personal protective equipment required by
either OSHA or its corresponding state agency during the embalming
procedure.
(3) Clothing and/or
personal effects of the decedent shall either be disinfected before delivery to
any person or discarded in a manner consistent with the disposal of
biohazardous material.
(4) The
technique utilized to effect eye, mouth, and lip closure shall be any technique
accepted as standard in the profession. Regardless of the technique chosen, the
embalmer shall be required to achieve the best results possible under
prevailing conditions.
(5) The
entire body may be thoroughly cleaned before arterial injection and shall be
cleaned immediately after the embalming procedure with an antiseptic soap or
detergent.
(6) Body orifices
(nostrils, mouth, anus, vagina, ear canals, and urethra) open lesions, and
other surgical incisions shall be treated with appropriate topical
disinfectants either before or immediately after arterial injection. After
cavity treatment has been completed, body orifices shall be packed in cotton
saturated with a suitable disinfectant of a phenol coefficient not less than
one in cases where purge is evident or is likely to occur and/or when the body
is to be transported out of state or by common carrier.
(7) The arterial fluid to be injected shall
be one commercially prepared and marketed with its percent of formaldehyde, or
other approved substance, by volume (index) clearly marked on the label or in
printed material supplied by the manufacturer.
(8) The fluids selected shall be injected
into all bodies in such dilutions and at such pressures as the professional
experience of the embalmer shall indicate, except that in no instance shall
dilute solution contain less than 1.0% formaldehyde, or an approved substance
that acts the same as formaldehyde, and as the professional experience of the
embalmer indicates, one gallon of dilute solution shall be used for each 50
pounds of body weight. Computation of solution strength is as follows: C x V =
C' x V', where C = strength of concentrated fluid, V = volume of ounces of
concentrated fluid, C' = strength of dilute fluid, and V' = volume of ounces of
dilute fluid
(9) Abdominal and
thoracic cavities shall be treated in the following manner.
(A) Liquid, semi-solid, and gaseous contents
which can be withdrawn through a trocar shall be aspirated by the use of the
highest vacuum pressure attainable.
(B) Concentrated, commercially prepared
cavity fluid which is acidic in nature (6.5 pH or lower) and contains at least
two preservative chemicals shall be injected and evenly distributed throughout
the aspirated cavities. A minimum of 16 ounces of concentrated cavity fluid
shall be used in any embalming case in which a minimum of two gallons of
arterial solution has been injected.
(C) Should distension and/or purge occur
after treatment, aspiration and injection as required shall be repeated as
necessary.
(10) The
embalmer shall be required to check each body thoroughly after treatment has
been completed. Any area not adequately disinfected by arterial and/or cavity
treatment shall be injected hypodermically with disinfectant and preservative
fluid of maximum results. A disinfectant and preservative medium shall be
applied topically in those cases which require further treatment.
(11) On bodies in which the arterial
circulation is incomplete or impaired by advance decomposition, burns, trauma,
autopsy, or any other cause, the embalmer shall be required to use the
hypodermic method to inject all areas which cannot be properly treated through
whatever arterial circulation remains intact (if any).
(12) In the event that the procedures in
paragraphs (1) - (11) of this subsection leave a dead human body in condition
to constitute a high risk of infection to anyone handling the body, the
embalmer shall be required to apply to the exterior of the body an appropriate
embalming medium in powder or gel form and to enclose the body in a zippered
plastic or rubber pouch prior to burial or other disposal.
(13) Dead human bodies donated to the State
Anatomical Board shall be embalmed as required by the State Anatomical Board
and where conflicting requirements exist, those requirements of the State
Anatomical Board shall prevail.
(14) All bodies should be treated in such
manner and maintained in such an atmosphere as to avoid infestation by vermin,
maggots, ants, and other insects; however, should these conditions occur, the
body should be treated with an effective vermicide and/or insecticide to
eliminate these conditions.
(15) No
licensed establishment or licensed embalmer shall take into its or the
embalmer's care any dead human body for embalming without exerting every
professional effort, and employing every possible technique or chemical, to
achieve the highest level of disinfecting.
(16) Nothing in this section shall be
interpreted to prohibit the use of supplemental or additional procedures or
chemicals which are known to and accepted in the funeral service profession and
which are not specifically mentioned in this subsection.
(b) Minor variations in these procedures
shall be permitted as long as they do not compromise the purpose of this rule
as stated in subsection (a) of this section.
(c) All embalming case reports must contain,
at a minimum, all the information on the case-report form promulgated by the
Commission. Funeral establishments may use other forms, so long as the forms
contain all the information on the promulgated form. A case report shall be
completed for each embalming procedure not later than the date of disposition
of the body which was embalmed. The embalmer shall ensure that all information
contained in the case report is correct and legible. The completed form shall
be retained for two years following the procedure date. The embalming case
report must be completed and signed by the licensed embalmer who performed the
embalming procedure.
(d) Nothing in
this section shall be interpreted to require embalming if a family member or
the person responsible for making arrangements for final disposition does not
authorize embalming.