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How do you get a job in a morgue?

By Gabriel Cooper

How to Get Started

  1. Earn your high school diploma or GED.
  2. Explore a part time job at a funeral home.
  3. Review and apply to appropriate two-year degree programs for mortuary assistants.
  4. Complete the necessary coursework and prepare your resume.
  5. Consider completing an internship if available at your school.

What jobs work in a morgue?

6 jobs in morgues

  • Funeral services assistant.
  • Morgue technician.
  • Esthetician.
  • Forensic science technician.
  • Funeral director.
  • Pathology assistant.

What to expect working in a morgue?

In all morgues your basic duty as a diener is to clean, clean, clean. You have to clean instruments, counters, walls, floors, and linens. The cleaning never seems to stop. You also do a lot of heavy lifting because you are constantly moving bodies while on carts.

How can I work in a morgue without a degree?

Morgue technicians need at least a high school diploma. Although you may find entry-level employment without having formal post-secondary education in the field many employers require an associate’s degree in medical laboratory science or mortuary science.

What to study to be a mortician?

Morticians require an associate’s degree in funeral service or mortuary science. Aspiring morticians can prepare for this degree by studying biology, chemistry and business at high school. Aspiring morticians should obtain an associate’s degree accredited by the American Board of Funeral Service Education (ABFSE).

Who cuts dead bodies?

Coroners
Coroner’s post-mortem examination A coroner is a judicial officer responsible for investigating deaths in certain situations. Coroners are usually lawyers or doctors with a minimum of 5 years’ experience. In most cases, a doctor or the police refer a death to the coroner.

What to Know Before becoming a mortician?

A mortician career revolves around the sciences (mortuary sciences, to be exact). That said, you should be interested in topics like anatomy and physiology prior to pursuing this career. A mortician degree program will cover subjects such as human biology, microbiology, thanato-chemistry, and the psychology of death.

What happens to the dead body in a coffin?

By 50 years in, your tissues will have liquefied and disappeared, leaving behind mummified skin and tendons. Eventually these too will disintegrate, and after 80 years in that coffin, your bones will crack as the soft collagen inside them deteriorates, leaving nothing but the brittle mineral frame behind.

Do coroners have PTSD?

The presence of possible PTSD in coroners is not surprising. Whereas the research is limited, it clearly demonstrates that coroners are subject to developing PTSD.