TOM SHEPARDSON, FATHER OF THE DMORT PROGRAM
Thomas J. Shepardson, known in the disaster response community
as father of the Disaster Mortuary Operational Response Team (DMORT)
program, died suddenly Tuesday, Feb. 18.
"As a volunteer, Tom's efforts to add mortuary affairs
and forensic experts to the National Disaster Medical System brought
comfort and peace of mind to thousands of families," said HHS Secretary
Tommy G. Thompson. "The identification of victims and proper treatment
of their remains is Tom's lasting legacy. He will be truly missed by
not only everyone in the DMORT program but also the entire National
Disaster Medical System."
Shepardson first became a volunteer with the Department
of Health and Human Services' Office of Emergency Preparedness in the
late 1980s with a vision and plan to improve our nation's ability to
respond to major disasters involving mass fatalities. He proposed volunteer
teams be formed of professionals with expertise in not only mortuary
affairs but also a variety of forensic sciences.
As a result of his efforts, HHS presented Shepardson's
plan to the National Disaster Medical System (NDMS). It was accepted
and in 1992 a network of ten DMORT teams, one in each federal region
of the country, was established.
Shepardson continued to be a driving force behind the
new DMORT program. He was instrumental in the development and procurement
of portable morgue systems. As an instructor, he traveled across the
country teaching mass fatality incident response at the Emergency Management
Institute, the NDMS national conference and for many state governments.
As DMORTs began to carry out missions, Shepardson was
there for every major deployment. His first assignment came when a DMORT
was sent to assist state and local officials at the Oklahoma City Murrah
Building bombing. Shepardson supervised the first use of the portable
morgue system for the Korean Air crash in Guam. He also led DMORT response
to a series of airline accidents including the 1999 Egypt Air and Alaskan
Air crash in 2000.
"Facing the difficult challenges of disaster response
with mass fatalities takes an extraordinary individual," said Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public Health Emergency Preparedness Jerome
Hauer. "Tom was someone I knew we could always count on to be there
in those trying times. He will be sorely missed."
While working with the National Transportation Safety
Board, Shepardson helped develop the family assistance program that
is now a key element in our nation's disaster response efforts.
After the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, Shepardson
helped lead DMORT missions that saw teams deployed to both New York
City and the Pennsylvania crash site. Over the course of the following
ten months, Shepardson continued to lead DMORT assistance to the New
York City Medical Examiner's office, which was critical in helping to
identify hundreds of victims from the World Trade Center attack.
Ever the innovator, shortly before his death, Shepardson
established a DMORT forensic oversight committee and was leading efforts
to add cadaver dogs to the DMORT program.
Note: All HHS press releases, fact sheets and other press materials
are available at www.hhs.gov/news