Funerals pile up and shortage of coffins as second wave of Covid 19 hits SA!!

South Africa has been hit by a second wave of Covid-19, deaths are mounting, undertakers are experiencing a shortage of coffins and burial space.

Deputy president of the National Funeral Directors’ Association (NFDA), Dr Lawrence Konyana, said some of their members in the Eastern Cape had reported a shortage of coffins.

According to Dr Konyana, this is because of the increasing number in deaths in the province. It has been made worse by some manufacturers closing during the festive season.

Dr Konyana said the spike in funerals was noticed in these provinces, Eastern Cape, Western Cape and KwaZulu-Natal, but he added that Gauteng was not far behind.

“Over the past two weeks we saw an increase in funerals in Gauteng and the number keeps going up,” he said.

He also said that in the coming weeks they predicted the turnaround time for burials being problematic due to some municipalities not being able to prepare graves at the required time.

He hinted that most private hospitals in the above mentioned provinces ,were urging families of the dead to fetch their bodies as soon as possible to make space in the mortuaries.Which proves that they are out of capacity.

“Once a person dies, the family is asked to fetch the body immediately

“We are slowly seeing this starting to happen in some of the public hospitals, so capacity might be a challenge there too,” Konyana said.

The MD for Doves Funeral Services, Jodene Smith, said they were already seeing an increase in funerals in certain coastal provinces.

“Our members are seeing an increase of nearly 80 percent. We also have more funerals during the week than we did before,” she said.

New regulations outlining cultural and religious practices have been gazetted, governing funerals, prayers and initiations during the revised level 3 .

According to Smith, KZN is holding 30% more funerals during the week than they did pre-Covid. Smith said undertakers were experiencing delays at government mortuaries when fetching bodies because of protocols around the handling of Covid-19 bodies.

“The process of fetching a body usually takes a maximum of 20 minutes under normal circumstance

” Now we spend more than an hour to fetch just one body because of protocols,” she said.

The queues at government mortuaries are currently very long with lncrease in deaths.

Mrs Smith said it would help to have home affairs services open on weekends to help with the registration of deaths. She said that would ease the load of undertakers.

On the capacity to hold bodies, Smith said they had measures in place during the first stage of the pandemic.
“We have enough personnel. We do have a pool of casual workers who are now on call regularly because of the increase in funerals,” she said.
General manager of Avbob Funeral Services, Pieter van der Westhuizen, said that during December the number of funerals they performed in the Eastern Cape increased by 120%, by 84% in KZN and by 60% in the Western Cape.

However, he was reluctant to attribute Avbob’s sharp rise in business exclusively to  Covid-19.
“I cannot honestly say that the increase is definitely because of Covid-19,” he said.
Van der Westhuizen said the South African Medical Research Council’s weekly stats on excess deaths were more in line with what they were seeing, as opposed to the Department of Health’s statistics. He said their branches across the country are coping, despite being under pressure.
“We dealt with this during July, at the first peak, so at that stage we brought in 19 refrigeration containers to deal with the additional bodies that we could not store in our mortuaries.”

He expected branches in north Gauteng and Limpopo would be inundated soon. The company had extended its office hours in Durban to 10pm and in East London to 8.30pm due to demand.
“We have also pushed a number of funerals into the week to clear up our morgues. We’re trying to get our customers to not only bury over the weekend but to bury during the week as well.”
Speaking to the media during a virtual briefing last week, KZN health MEC Nomagugu Simelane-Zulu disputed reports that state mortuaries in the province were running out of space.
“As far as we are concerned there is no area where we have run out of space.”
Simelane-Zulu provided figures for the following mortuaries:

Phoenix mortuary — body capacity of 409; 109 spaces available.

Port Shepstone — body capacity of 112; 92 spaces available.

KwaDukuza — body capacity of 96; 23 spaces available.

Pietermaritzburg — body capacity of 409; 200 spaces available.

New Hanover — body capacity of 22; 10 spaces available.

Newcastle — body capacity of 85; 68 spaces available.

uThukela district — body capacity of 70; 45 spaces available.

Umzinyathi district — body capacity of 94; 80 spaces available.

She said she could not provide insight as to why KZN was hit so hard by the second wave.
“We don’t have a scientific response just yet but the minister and his team are working on it,” she said.

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