Richard,

Thank you so much!!\

v/r,

Valerie

Valerie A. Hannen,MLT(ASCP),HTL,SU(FL)
Histology Section Chief
Parrish Medical Center
951 N. Washington Avenue
Titusville, Florida 32796
P: 321-268-6333  Ext. 7506
F: 321-268-6149
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
www.parrishmed.com



From: richard cartun <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, June 16, 2025 8:20 PM
To: [email protected]; Hannen, Valerie 
<[email protected]>
Subject: [EXTERNAL] Re: [Histonet] Release of Tissue Policy/ form

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Begin Original Message:
Hi, Valerie!

I worked in Pathology at a hospital here in Connecticut for many years and 
handled all these requests, sometimes in conjunction with our Legal Department. 
 The State of Connecticut has a statute that states human tissue can only be 
handled by medical personnel in hospitals, surgery centers, labs, or funeral 
homes.  Therefore, we would only release patient specimens that were in 
formalin (mostly fetuses for burial) to a representative from a funeral home.  
The patient or family member would have to contact the funeral home for pickup 
and pay for all associated charges.  We also had a release form that the 
requestor and the funeral home would have to complete and sign off on.    With 
the exception of a fetus for burial, these requirements almost always resulted 
in patients canceling their initial request.  I also found that speaking with 
the requester and educating them on this issue helped, too.  For example, many 
towns have ordinances that prohibit burying human tissue on the homeown
 er's property.

For patients who wanted their "fresh" placenta after giving birth, our hospital 
policy was for the OB Department to handle it; Pathology did not get involved!

I hope this information helps.

Richard W. Cartun, MS, PhD
Morphologic Proteomics, LLC
On Monday, June 16, 2025 at 03:53:06 PM EDT, Hannen, Valerie via Histonet 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> 
wrote:


Good Afternoon all!!

I am hoping someone can share with me their policy and form that is used in 
accordance of the policy on the subject of releasing tissue per patient request 
to the patient?  We have had a few incident recently where the patient/ family 
has asked for placenta and or the fetus ( less than 20 weeks gestation).

My concern is that these specimens or any specimen in formalin is the formalin! 
We have a very old policy and I am not comfortable with it. I would like to use 
other's policies as a guide (not copy it verbatim).  Any suggestions or help 
would be greatly appreciated.


TIA.

v/r,
Valerie

Valerie A. Hannen,MLT(ASCP),HTL,SU(FL)
Histology Section Chief
Parrish Medical Center
951 N. Washington Avenue
Titusville, Florida 32796
P: 321-268-6333  Ext. 7506
F: 321-268-6149
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]>
www.parrishmed.com<http://www.parrishmed.com>

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