Anonymous ID: d6ed9b April 5, 2020, 12:36 p.m. No.8694861   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4941 >>5070 >>5076 >>5086

'Surreal': NY funeral homes struggle as virus deaths surge

 

By JAKE SEINER and JOHN MINCHILLO Associated Press April 5, 2020 — 11:15am

 

NEW YORK — Pat Marmo walked among 20 or so deceased in the basement of his Brooklyn funeral home, his protective mask pulled down so his pleas could be heard.

 

"Every person there, they're not a body," he said. "They're a father, they're a mother, they're a grandmother. They're not bodies. They're people."

 

Like many funeral homes in New York and around the globe, Marmo's business is in crisis as he tries to meet surging demand amid the coronavirus pandemic that has killed more than 2,200 people in New York City alone. His two cellphones and the office line are ringing constantly. He's apologizing to families at the start of every conversation for being unusually terse, and begging them to insist hospitals hold their dead loved ones as long as possible.

 

His company is equipped to handle 40 to 60 cases at a time, no problem. On Thursday morning, it was taking care of 185.

 

"This is a state of emergency," he said. "We need help."

 

Funeral directors are being squeezed on one side by inundated hospitals trying to offload bodies, and on the other by the fact that cemeteries and crematoriums are booked for a week at least, sometimes two.

 

Marmo let The Associated Press into his Daniel J. Schaefer funeral home in the Sunset Park neighborhood of Brooklyn on Thursday to show how dire the situation has become.

 

He has about 20 embalmed bodies stored on gurneys and stacked on shelves in the basement and another dozen in his secondary chapel room, both chilled by air conditioners.

 

He estimated that more than 60% had died of the new coronavirus. For most people, the virus causes mild or moderate symptoms, but for some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness and lead to death.

 

"It's surreal," he said.

 

Hospitals in New York have been using refrigerated trucks to store the dead, and Marmo is trying to find his own. One company quoted him a price of $6,000 per month, and others are refusing outright because they don't want their equipment used for bodies.

 

Even if he gets a truck, he has nowhere obvious to put it. He's wondering if the police station across the street might let him use its driveway.

 

He's also hoping the Environmental Protection Agency will lift regulations that limit the hours crematoriums can operate. That would ease some of the backlog.

 

"I need somebody to help me," he said. "Maybe if they send me refrigeration, or guide me in a way that I could set up a refrigerated trailer that I could keep, and I could supervise."

 

Patrick Kearns, a fourth-generation funeral director in Queens, said the industry has never experienced anything like this. His family was prepared on 9/11 for their business to be overrun, but with so many bodies lost amid the rubble, the rush never came.

 

https://www.startribune.com/surreal-ny-funeral-homes-struggle-as-virus-deaths-surge/569342972/

Anonymous ID: d6ed9b April 5, 2020, 12:52 p.m. No.8694972   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5026 >>5088 >>5154 >>5448

Hospital ship remains empty as New York battles COVID-19

 

A military hospital ship which arrived in New York City on Monday is fighting to stay in a coronavirus-free "bubble" so as not to risk bringing the disease on board, its medical officer said.

 

The 1,000-bed USNS Comfort, previously deployed to conflict and natural disaster zones, was sent to Manhattan to ease the strain on health centers in the city at the epicenter of America's outbreak by caring for patients other than those diagnosed with the virus.

 

By Friday it had received 21 patients, according to the ship's press officer Lieutenant Commander Amelia Umayam.

 

"We consider the USNS Comfort to be in a bubble," said medical officer Captain Patrick Amersbach as he explained the procedures followed by the ship's crew to shield it from the virus, including not disembarking for as long as it is docked.

 

Patients are arriving directly from New York hospitals and will be screened in advance to make sure they are free of the coronavirus.

 

For the time being, even relatives of patients are not allowed to board the ship – though Amersbach said a protocol for loved ones to visit was being put in place "because nobody wants to be without their family members."

 

If a worker needs to board the ship to perform installations or repairs, they must be examined, wash their hands in front of a witness, and put on a mask before being escorted to the precise location on the ship where they will work.

 

Once finished, they will be escorted directly off again.

 

New York City has had more than 57,000 positive coronavirus cases since the arrival of the pandemic and 1,867 deaths.

 

The nearby Javits Center, which has been converted into a field hospital by the US military and was not originally intended to house coronavirus patients, will now do so.

 

But there are no plans for the USNS Comfort to make such a move.

 

"We're going to try and stay in that bubble," said Amersbach.

 

https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2020/04/05/hospital-ship-remains-empty-as-new-york-battles-covid-19.html

Anonymous ID: d6ed9b April 5, 2020, 12:57 p.m. No.8695004   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Javits Center is a Clusterfuck….

 

"Meanwhile, Ken Dixon, the Javits Center’s head of security, was dealing with a nightmare of protecting the building from both unauthorized visitors and an invisible enemy in covid-19. His team is using only two of the building’s 225 perimeter doors — with the help of the New York City police, the New York State police and the National Guard. Already, they’ve had patients who’ve tried to walk in through the front door — seeking a coronavirus test or trying to get admitted — rather than first seeking transfer from a hospital.

 

They called an ambulance for the woman who showed up with covid-19 symptoms, but a Javits security guard is now one of two people on staff who have the disease — and 25 percent of Dixon’s security team is self-quarantining."

 

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/inside-the-javits-center-new-york-e2-80-99s-militarized-makeshift-hospital/ar-BB12aOwQ