What the study found
The study found that care is woven throughout anatomical pathology technologists’ practice and identities in medico-legal autopsies. It also found that their work can be both technically and morally “good,” including actions that go beyond what is necessary or mandated.
Why the authors say this matters
The authors say this matters because the article extends understanding of care to relationships with the dead. The study suggests this also adds new insight into how coronial justice can gain legitimacy.
What the researchers tested
The researcher explored original empirical data from interviews with Anatomical Pathology Technologists. These technologists assist during post-mortems and take responsibility for the care of the deceased person’s body before and after autopsy.
What worked and what didn't
The abstract says care was enacted within a complex context of relations and regulations. Within that context, practice could be technically and morally good, including actions beyond what was required. The abstract does not describe specific comparisons, failed approaches, or negative outcomes.
What to keep in mind
The available summary does not describe detailed limitations. The article is based on interviews with Anatomical Pathology Technologists, so the findings reflect that context and group.
Key points
- Care is described as central to anatomical pathology technologists’ practice and identities.
- The study focuses on medico-legal autopsies and the care of the deceased’s body before and after autopsy.
- The authors argue that practice can be technically and morally “good,” including actions beyond what is required.
- The article says this extends understanding of care to relationships with the dead.
- The abstract does not provide detailed limitations.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- Care is central in anatomical pathology technologists’ autopsy work
- Authors:
- Imogen Jones
- Institutions:
- University of Leeds
- Publication date:
- 2026-04-06
- OpenAlex record:
- View
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