<P> For example, the U.S. ARMY SOLDIER AND BIOLOGICAL CHEMICAL COMMAND suggests that: </P> <Dl> <Dd> "The entire incident is a crime scene requiring the collection of criminal evidence and suspicious victim belongings . The preservation of a proper chain of custody must be maintained for all evidence...patients could be suspects and their belongings may be evidence...Direct patients through a detailed decontamination process and deal with potentially unruly patients...Enforce order when persons become uncooperative when asked to remove clothing and relinquish personal items .". </Dd> </Dl> <Dd> "The entire incident is a crime scene requiring the collection of criminal evidence and suspicious victim belongings . The preservation of a proper chain of custody must be maintained for all evidence...patients could be suspects and their belongings may be evidence...Direct patients through a detailed decontamination process and deal with potentially unruly patients...Enforce order when persons become uncooperative when asked to remove clothing and relinquish personal items .". </Dd> <P> Paul Rega, M.D., FACEP, and Kelly Burkholder - Allen also note, in "The ABCs of Bioterrorism" an additional advantage in decontaminating everyone found at the scene of an incident, because this will help the authorities in searching through everyone's clothes to find suspicious items: </P>

When can we say that a person is fully decontaminated