Âé¶¹´«Ã½

Westminster Diary

By Tam Dalyell

16 December 2000

IDENTIFYING the dead must be one of the most harrowing tasks that bereaved
relatives and GPs face. Teeth are often the best clue, but how can a pathologist
identify a corpse with dentures?

Hisashi Kishigami, a dentist from Osaka, came up with the idea of a silicon
chip that can be embedded in a set of false teeth
(Âé¶¹´«Ã½, 30 September, p 15)
to help speed up the process. I suggested to Paul Boateng, the Home Office
minister with responsibilities for coroners’ law, that chip technology was a
sensible idea.

Boateng replied that anything making it easier to identify…

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