Six persons with skin or respiratory disorders presenting during the mission, and three with aggravated symptoms from pre-existing disease, were identified more than 4 years after disaster victim identification (DVI) in Thailand. Thus nine cases relevant to the objective of the examination were found among the 152 persons examined (6%). Most disorders were mild, and for some of the participants, no longer existing at the time of the examination. Among Swedish forensic personnel who had worked with similar tasks in Thailand one case of asthma and one of hyperreacting airways (RADS) had been identified. The former was presumably caused by exposure to high concentration of formaldehyde during a confirmatory autopsy performed in Sweden, while onset of the latter was more insidious [9]. None from the Danish DVI team had as pronounced disorder or clear causal relation to an exposure and none had the same exposure to formaldehyde from confirmatory autopsies.