05/24/2026
You can be trained to investigate death.
You can learn scene preservation.
You can learn evidence collection.
You can learn anatomy, toxicology, pathology, photography, chain of custody, and courtroom testimony.
You can learn how to stay calm while families scream.
How to make notifications.
How to document tragedy professionally.
How to walk into homes where life changed forever only moments before.
But there is one thing this profession does not teach you:
How to be unaffected by it.
Because no amount of training prepares a person to repeatedly witness humanity at its worst moments and walk away untouched.
No certification teaches you how to unsee a child death.
No textbook explains how to carry the weight of su***des, overdoses, homicides, decompositions, fatal crashes, or the grief left behind.
No policy tells you what to do with the images that follow you home.
This work changes people.
Not because medicolegal death professionals are weak. Because they are human.
And yet many in this profession are still expected to absorb trauma silently and move on to the next call as if nothing happened.
The public often sees a report, a case number, or a statistic.
We see:
• The wedding photos still hanging on the wall
• The untouched dinner on the table
• The child’s backpack by the door
• The family member begging for answers
• The final moments of someone’s entire life
That stays with people. I don’t care who you are.
The medicolegal death profession sits at the intersection of public safety, public health, science, and human grief.
It requires professionalism during the exact moments others are experiencing the worst day of their lives.
And despite that reality, many death investigators, coroners, medical examiners, autopsy staff, and forensic professionals still work without adequate mental health resources, peer support, decompression, or recognition for the cumulative trauma exposure they carry.
You can absolutely train someone to investigate death.
But you cannot train someone to repeatedly witness human tragedy and remain unaffected by it.
That is why this profession deserves support.
That is why mental health conversations matter.
That is why wellness initiatives matter.
That is why recognition matters.
Because the last responders deserve a first line of support.