International consensus for a dissection room quality system (DRQS): A Delphi panel study.
Miki Dalmau-PastorNilo Alvarez ToledoIván Valdivia-GandurRichard Shane TubbsMaría Teresa Vázquez-OsorioJ M de AntaClara Simon de BlasAlberto Prats-GalinoMarious LoukasMaria Cristina Manzanares-CéspedesPublished in: Clinical anatomy (New York, N.Y.) (2023)
Dissection Rooms (DRs) are key facilities that allow teaching and research on human anatomy, where students and researchers work with human bodies to acquire, increase, or create new knowledge. Usually, DRs work with a Body Donation Program (BDP), where living donors bequeath their bodies for use in teaching and research after they expire. Despite DRs being part of universities worldwide, no common guidelines, regulations, or quality management systems (QMS) exist that could be applied to different countries. With that purpose in mind, we aimed to develop a QMS that could be applied to DRs globally, using a Delphi panel to achieve consensus about the items that should constitute the QMS. The panel was constituted by 20 anatomy professors from 20 different countries, and the 167 standards to create the rules or guidelines that constitute the QMS were divided in five categories: direction, body donation, students, instructors, and research. After two rounds of revisions, 150 standards were considered "essential" or "important" by more than 70% of the participants, thus being incorporated to the Dissection Room Quality System (DRQS). The results of this panel represent a minimum list of items of the DRQS for improving the functioning of DRs globally.