PERMANENT RULES
Effective Date of Rule: Thirty-one days after filing.
Purpose: (1) Reflect changes in law made by SSB 5752 in 2005; (2) move human remains handling provisions in chapter 246-490 WAC, Vital statistics, to a new chapter 246-500 WAC, Handling of human remains; (3) adopt provisions to respect religious diversity; (4) establish provisions to implement the waiver clause in RCW 18.39.215 to allow funeral directors and embalmers to delay placing human remains under, or removing from, refrigeration; (5) allow local health officers to impose additional requirements or suspend requirements of this chapter in emergency situations; and (6) clarify the rule.
Citation of Existing Rules Affected by this Order: Repealing WAC 246-490-001, 246-490-040, 246-490-050, and 246-490-060.
Statutory Authority for Adoption: RCW 43.20.050.
Other Authority: RCW 18.39.215.
Adopted under notice filed as WSR 06-12-113 on June 7, 2006.
Changes Other than Editing from Proposed to Adopted Version: (1) Definition of human remains clarified by stating that the term does not mean archaeological resources under chapter 27.53 RCW; (2) definition of refrigerate changed to provide that leak-resistant sealed ice packs are an acceptable means of cooling human remains outside of a funeral establishment; (3) clarification is added to WAC 246-500-030 stating that this rule does not restrict the authority of the coroner or medical examiner when human remains are under his or her jurisdiction under RCW 68.50.010.
A final cost-benefit analysis is available by contacting Ned Therien, P.O. Box 47990, Olympia, WA 98504-7990, phone (360) 236-4103, fax (360) 236-4088, e-mail ned.therien@doh.wa.gov.
Number of Sections Adopted in Order to Comply with Federal Statute: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; Federal Rules or Standards: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; or Recently Enacted State Statutes: New 2, Amended 0, Repealed 2.
Number of Sections Adopted at Request of a Nongovernmental Entity: New 2, Amended 0, Repealed 1.
Number of Sections Adopted on the Agency's Own Initiative: New 2, Amended 0, Repealed 0.
Number of Sections Adopted in Order to Clarify, Streamline, or Reform Agency Procedures: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 1.
Number of Sections Adopted Using Negotiated Rule Making: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; Pilot Rule Making: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; or Other Alternative Rule Making: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0.
Date Adopted: August 9, 2006.
Craig McLaughlin
Executive Director
OTS-8933.1
REPEALER
The following sections of the Washington Administrative Code are repealed:
WAC 246-490-001 | Legal authorities. |
WAC 246-490-040 | Handling and care of human remains. |
WAC 246-490-050 | Transportation of human remains. |
WAC 246-490-060 | Cremated remains. |
OTS-8934.2
HANDLING OF HUMAN REMAINS
(2) "Burial transit permit" means a form, approved and supplied by the state registrar of vital statistics as described in chapter 70.58 RCW, identifying the name of the deceased, date and place of death, general information, disposition and registrar and sexton information.
(3) "Coroner" means the county official as described under chapter 36.24 RCW and RCW 36.16.030.
(4) "Department" means the Washington state department of health.
(5) "Embalmer" means a person defined and licensed under chapter 18.39 RCW.
(6) "Funeral establishment" means a place of business defined and licensed under chapter 18.39 RCW.
(7) "Funeral director" means a person defined and licensed under chapter 18.39 RCW.
(8) "Health care provider" means any person having direct or supervisory responsibility for the delivery of health care, including persons credentialed in Washington state under Title 18 RCW and military personnel providing health care within Washington state regardless of licensure.
(9) "Human remains" or "remains" means the body of a deceased person, in any stage of decomposition, and includes cremated human remains, but excludes archaeological resources under chapter 27.53 RCW.
(10) "Local health officer" means a licensed physician defined and appointed under RCW 70.05.050.
(11) "Local registrar of vital statistics" means the local health officer or administrator who registers certificates of birth and death occurring in his or her designated registration district under chapter 70.58 RCW.
(12) "Medical examiner" means a physician appointed by the county legislative authority to replace the coroner under RCW 36.24.190.
(13) "Refrigerate" means:
(a) Placing in a mechanically cooled unit maintained at a maximum temperature of 48°F in a licensed funeral establishment; or
(b) Placing in a mechanically cooled unit maintained at a maximum temperature of 48°F or packing with dry ice or leak-resistant sealed ice packs outside of a funeral establishment.
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(a) Wash hands and other exposed skin surfaces with soap and water or equivalent immediately and thoroughly after contact with human remains, blood, or body fluids;
(b) Use barrier precautions if a procedure involves potential contact with blood, body fluids, or internal tissues of the deceased;
(c) Not eat, drink, or smoke in areas where handling of human remains or body fluids takes place;
(d) Use reasonable precautions to prevent spillage of body fluids during transfer and transport of human remains including, when necessary:
(i) Containing, wrapping, or pouching with materials appropriate to the condition of the human remains; and
(ii) Obtaining approval from the coroner or medical examiner prior to pouching any human remains under their jurisdiction;
(e) Wash hands immediately after gloves are removed;
(f) Take precautions to prevent injuries by needles, scalpels, instruments, and equipment during use, cleaning, and disposal;
(g) Properly disinfect or discard protective garments and gloves immediately after use;
(h) Properly disinfect all surfaces, instruments, and equipment after contact with human remains, blood, or body fluids;
(i) Provide appropriate means for disposing of body fluids, blood, tissues, and wastes or for retaining them for final disposition with the body.
(i) All autopsy rooms, morgues, preparation rooms, and other places where human remains are handled must be equipped with impervious containers with disposable, impervious liners and tightly fitting closures.
(ii) Body fluids, blood, tissues, and wastes removed from human remains must be kept with the body or disposed in accordance with local ordinances and other applicable laws and rules for infectious waste.
(iii) A sewage system approved by the local health officer or the department may be used for the disposal of blood and other body fluids.
(iv) All containers and liners used to receive solid or fluid materials removed from human remains must be cleaned and disinfected immediately after use, interred with the body, or disposed in accordance with local ordinances and other applicable laws and rules for infectious waste.
(2) Persons responsible for transfer or transport of human remains must clean and disinfect equipment and the vehicle if soiled with body fluids or any other portion of human remains.
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(2) Funeral directors, embalmers, and others assisting in the preparation of human remains for final disposition may delay refrigeration upon receipt or remove human remains from refrigeration for the following activities:
(a) Embalming;
(b) Transporting;
(c) Cremating or burying;
(d) Viewing for identification for a period of time not to exceed one hour by a person able to identify the deceased;
(e) Washing, anointing, clothing, praying over, reading to, singing to, sitting with, guarding, viewing, or otherwise accompanying the deceased for a period of time not to exceed twenty-four hours by persons acting according to the directions of the deceased or the person having the right to control the disposition of the remains under RCW 68.50.160, provided that anyone directly touching the remains uses barrier precautions according to requirements under WAC 246-500-020 (1)(b); or
(f) As otherwise approved by the local health officer after evaluating specific circumstances, the need to protect public health, and recognition of religious beliefs.
(3) A funeral director, embalmer, or other person assisting in the preparation of human remains for final disposition must prohibit activities otherwise allowed under subsection (2)(e) of this section if informed by a local health officer or medical examiner that such activities would pose a direct threat to human health.
(4) Nothing in this section restricts the authority of a coroner or medical examiner when human remains are under his or her jurisdiction in accordance with RCW 68.50.010.
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(a) Use effective hygienic measures consistent with handling potentially infectious material; and
(b) Obtain a burial-transit permit from the local health officer or local registrar of vital statistics or file a notice of removal according to requirements of RCW 70.58.230 prior to transporting human remains from one registration district to another.
(2) Prior to transporting human remains by common carrier, the persons responsible for preparing and handling the remains must:
(a) Enclose the human remains in a leak-resistant container placed inside another leak-resistant, securely constructed shipping container to prevent the release of all body fluids;
(b) Obtain and enclose the burial-transit permit in a sturdy envelope; and
(c) Attach the burial-transit permit to the shipping container.
(3) Persons responsible for human remains routed to the point of final destination on a burial-transit permit:
(a) May temporarily hold the remains at a stopover point within the state of Washington for funeral or other purposes without an additional permit; and
(b) Must surrender the burial-transit permit to the sexton or crematory official at the point of interment or cremation.
(4) Sextons and cremation officials shall accept the burial-transit permit as authority for interment in a cemetery or for cremation within the state of Washington.
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(2) A local registrar, in cooperation with the Washington state cemetery board, may issue a permit for disposition of cremated human remains. The permit for the disposition of cremated remains may be used in connection with the transportation of cremated remains by common carrier or other means.
(3) The local registrar or the department of health may issue a permit for the disposition of cremated human remains which have been in the lawful possession of any person, firm, corporation, or association for a period of ninety days or more. This permit will specify that the disposition of cremated remains must be consistent with Washington state laws and rules.
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(1) Impose additional requirements for the handling, care, transport, or disposition of human remains; or
(2) Suspend any requirements of this chapter.
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