An Overview of Information Technology's Effect on Radiology Services

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Forensic anthropology has employed human remains or bones from a deceased individual to analyse human remains for more than a century. It is common knowledge that DNA testing, fingerprinting, and dental records are reliable ways to gather enough proof to identify people who have passed away or victims of natural disasters. Bone information is also used by several forensic anthropologists, forensic pathologists, and radiological technology researchers to determine age and sex. To apply to unsolved cases and human remains, medical examiners/coroners, forensic pathologists, and forensic anthropologists are constantly developing standards and methodical analysis techniques. Creating a quick and accurate identification technique for use by a small group of professionals on-site following an unforeseen mass disaster occurrence is one strategy to improve forensic personal identification. The challenge of identifying a catastrophe victim by visual recognition was acknowledged by Interpol when it published standards for disaster victim identification (DVI) in 2000. Since 2008, the Organization of Scientific Area Committees for Forensic Science and the Scientific Working Group for Forensic Anthropology have collaborated to organise, establish best practises for, and develop a consensus standard. program's objectives include using scientific techniques to determine the cause of death, establishing procedures for dental records, and creating databases for the identification of the deceased. When the subsequent major catastrophe will occur is impossible to predict. Identification of victims is delayed as a result of inadequate planning for upcoming major catastrophes. Before the next major calamity strikes, researchers have been carefully debating and researching how to work with police officers and coroners. This is crucial, particularly during terrorism-related incidents, earthquakes, tsunamis, floods, and wildfires. This article outlines the difficulties with personal identification as well as the cuttingedge technology being created for radiography permission and identification. A new review that concentrated on radiographic technology and medical physics is available with detailed summaries. The objective of this review is to present information and viewpoints on the creation of efficient and practical procedures for forensic pathology and anthropology.