Table of Contents
What do funeral directors do to a dead body?
If you do not opt for embalming, the funeral director can prepare your loved one’s body for a viewing before their funeral following many of the same steps – washing the person’s body, setting their features, brushing their hair and dressing them. The person’s body will be kept refrigerated in between viewings.
Do funeral directors prepare bodies?
They also direct preparation and shipment of bodies for out-of-State burial. Most funeral directors also are trained, licensed, and practicing embalmers. Embalming is a sanitary, cosmetic, and preservative process through which the body is prepared for interment.
What happens to a body at a funeral home?
Funeral homes are caretakers of the recently deceased until burial or cremation. What happens to a body at a funeral home depends upon the wishes of the deceased, loved ones, religious rites and cultural customs. The processes involved with the remains of the recently deceased are regulated by the funeral industry and state or federal law.
Do funeral homes transport bodies to a crematory?
Most funeral homes will transport a body to a crematory, but some large operations will have crematories on the premises. A common practice is to have a viewing or visitation at the funeral home and then have the body cremated before a funeral or memorial service.
What do hospitals do with dead bodies after a patient dies?
When the deceased passes, and no organ donation, tissue donation or post-mortem is done – which usually is the case – in our hospital the nurses will wash the deceased and stuff some cotton in the anus against fecal leakage, maybe in the mouth against sunken cheeks, bring the body to the morgue, where the undertaker will take the body away.
Why do funeral homes refrigerate bodies?
Refrigerating bodies keeps them from decomposing too quickly. When they first arrive, bodies that come to the funeral home from morgues or hospitals are normally stored in refrigeration units. Keeping bodies cool prevents them from decomposing too quickly to be embalmed and viewed.