Anthropometric weight estimation is less accurate than visual weight estimation in forensic postmortem cases in a Swiss population

When the time since death must be calculated forensic pathologists often consider a calculation based on the Henssge nomogram. This calculation requires an estimated body weight. Previous research has indicated that healthcare workers generally inaccurately guessed patients’ body weights. In recent...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of forensic and legal medicine 2024-11, Vol.108, p.102787, Article 102787
Hauptverfasser: Merriam, Tim, Enders, Markus, Bolliger, Stephan A., Schweitzer, Wolf, Thali, Michael J., Ebert, Lars, Fliss, Barbara
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container_title Journal of forensic and legal medicine
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creator Merriam, Tim
Enders, Markus
Bolliger, Stephan A.
Schweitzer, Wolf
Thali, Michael J.
Ebert, Lars
Fliss, Barbara
description When the time since death must be calculated forensic pathologists often consider a calculation based on the Henssge nomogram. This calculation requires an estimated body weight. Previous research has indicated that healthcare workers generally inaccurately guessed patients’ body weights. In recent years, weight estimation methods based on anthropometric parameters, such as mid-arm or waist circumference, have been shown to improve estimation accuracy. This study aimed to examine whether anthropometric weight estimation methods could improve weight estimation accuracy compared to visual estimation in forensic pathology. In 199 cases from a Swiss population, we measured the actual body weight, mid-arm circumference, waist circumference, and body height before autopsy. Additionally, two forensic pathologists visually estimated the body weight. We found mid-arm circumferences to correlate the strongest with actual body weight (Pearson ’sr 0.87, 95 % CI 0.83–0.90). However, all mid-arm circumference-based estimation methods performed worse than those previously described. A statistical bias between −12.3 % and −14.5 % indicated a systematic weight underestimation. Combined two-physician visual estimation performed significantly better than anthropometric measurements in our population but showed no difference from anthropometric estimation methods previously described in the literature. Further research is needed on novel body weight estimation methods that are currently not applicable for the global population. •Visual body weight estimation was more accurate than anthropometric measurements.•Previously published anthropometric methods systematically underestimated weight.•Two-physician visual weight estimation performed better than single-physician.
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A statistical bias between −12.3 % and −14.5 % indicated a systematic weight underestimation. Combined two-physician visual estimation performed significantly better than anthropometric measurements in our population but showed no difference from anthropometric estimation methods previously described in the literature. 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subjects Adult
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Anthropometry
Arm - anatomy & histology
Body Height
Body Weight
Female
Forensic medicine
Humans
Male
Mid-arm circumference
Middle Aged
Postmortem interval
Switzerland
Time since death
Waist Circumference
Weight estimation
Young Adult
title Anthropometric weight estimation is less accurate than visual weight estimation in forensic postmortem cases in a Swiss population
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