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Coronavirus: New York seeks solutions for its dead


Coronavirus: New York seeks solutions for its dead

mardi, 07.04.2020

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news-single-imgcaption" style="width:240px;">The images have struck the spirits in recent days: bodies, covered with sheets or tarpaulins, transported by employees in protective suits on stretchers in refrigerated trucks, now ubiquitous around the hospitals of the first American metropolis, where near 3,500 deaths were officially recorded on Monday.

In New York City, which consolidates its sad status as the center of the coronavirus epidemic in the United States, the question now arises of the fate of the increasingly numerous dead. To the point that the possibility of having to proceed soon to “temporary burials” in a park, to relieve overwhelmed funeral directors, has even been raised.

The images have struck people’s minds in recent days: bodies, covered with sheets or tarpaulins, transported by employees in protective suits on stretchers in refrigerated trucks, now ubiquitous around the hospitals of the
first American metropolis, where nearly 3,500 deaths were officially recorded on Monday.

These trucks make it possible to store bodies which accumulate too quickly for the funeral directors to come and collect them directly from the hospital. On Monday morning alone, in less than an hour, AFP saw nine bodies loaded into trucks parked outside Wyckoff Hospital in Brooklyn. Because with the increase in the death toll in New York State – where there are regularly at least 500 new deaths
per day for a week – several undertakers said they were “overwhelmed”.

Huge stress

“Most funeral homes have limited refrigeration capacity,” said Ken Brewster, owner of a small funeral director in the Queens neighborhood, beset with requests for funerals from Covid-19 patients for a week. “If you don’t have the room, you need these trucks.” The influx is all the stronger as some houses have decided not to take any person who has died of the disease, which is “their right”, he adds. For Pat Marmo, who manages five funeral homes across the city, the stress generated by this influx of deaths is difficult to manage, especially since he himself has just lost a cousin and another close relative in the city. epidemic. “The hospitals push us to come and collect the bodies, but we do not have the premises to manage (them)”, he explains, stressing that we currently have “three times more” deaths than normal times and a schedule burials spread “until next month.” It’s like September 11, 2001 that would last for days and days. ”

“If the need increases …”

The funeral directors are so overloaded that an elected municipal official spoke on Monday of the possibility of carrying out “temporary burials” in a municipal park.
“This will probably be done by using a municipal park for burials. Trenches will be dug for rows of ten coffins,” said this elected from northern Manhattan, Mark Levine, on his Twitter account. In a city already transformed by the pandemic, with tents for the sick pitched in Central Park, this statement has
immediately struck the spirits. But the town hall quickly qualified the point. “We do not currently plan to use parks as cemeteries,” said spokeswoman Freddi Goldstein.
She nevertheless admitted that the city was considering using the island of Hart Island, near the Bronx district, where already lie in mass graves nearly a million New Yorkers, often poor or destitute, for “burials. temporary “,” if
the need is increasing “.

“Hold until the end”

Deaths aren’t just on the rise in hospitals, says Levine. Before the pandemic, 20 to 25 people died in their homes in New York every day. Now it’s 200 to 215, he said, although it is often not possible to posthumously verify whether they have died from the virus.
Mayor Bill de Blasio himself spoke on Monday of the possibility of “temporary burials” to “last until the end” of the crisis. “We are not there, I will not go into details,” he qualified during a press briefing.
New York, the densest city in the United States with already more than 72,000 infected people, hopes not to come to that. Gov. Andrew Cuomo said on Monday that the statewide death toll had stabilized since Saturday, for
stay below 600 per day. He nevertheless ordered the extension of the confinement measures until April 29, stressing that one should above all not be “too confident” and abandon too early the efforts of social distancing. (AWP)

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