Now I'd imagine the words 'OnlyFans' and 'hospital morgue' are unlikely to be two things which you ever thought you'd ever hear together in a sentence, but thanks to the internet, anything is now possible.
That's right, NHS pathologist Amelie Warnier is currently under investigation after hospital bosses stumbled across a raunchy snap of the 44-year-old brandishing her cleavage while at work.
Snapped in the mortuary waiting room at Broomfield Hospital in Chelmsford, Warnier appears to have stripped down to her underwear and is leaning forward suggestively on one of the waiting room's sofas.
You know, the place where people wait anxiously before being taken to view their recently deceased loved ones.
So what led to Warnier deciding to ditch her scrubs and create adult content while sitting just a handful of minutes away from the deceased?
Amelie Warnier has defended taking the picture (Facebook/Amelie Warnier) According to Warnier, she snapped the photo while at work during the Covid-19 pandemic because you 'only live once'.
"I only took that picture when I first opened the account," she told The Sun, when grilled about why she decided that a hospital building housing the recently deceased was the perfect place to send pulses racing.
"Someone pushed me to do it and I said f**k it, why not...You only live once."
Unsurprisingly NHS bosses weren't onboard with the idea that a member of staff was using hospital grounds to create racy content and have now opened an investigation into the image.
"They’ve opened an investigation, apparently they’ve employed a contractor to investigate me," she added.
Mid and South Essex NHS Foundation Trust, which runs Broomfield Hospital, said in a statement to The Sun that it was currently taking action in line with its HR policies and procedures. The Trust added that there are also 'strict codes of practice' when it comes to who is allowed inside hospital morgues.
The NHS trust has launched an investigation (Facebook/Amelie Warnier) Meanwhile social media guidelines from NHS England urges employees to 'act responsibly' when sharing content on the internet, including on 'personal, non-professional' profiles.
"The standards expected of healthcare professionals and organisations do not change on social media channels," the guidance adds.
This isn't the first time which Warnier, who qualified as a mortician in her native Spain back in 2012 and has since performed 'thousands' of autopsies while working in the UK, was fallen foul of hospital guidelines when it comes to her online presence either, with the mum-of-two adding that she'd previously been warned against creating TikTok clips of her working out at the hospital.
You only live once indeed.
LADbible has contacted Mid and South Essex NHS Foundation Trust for further comment.