Coroners service confirms first use of refrigerated morgue truck in B.C. to manage overflow of dead - Action News
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British Columbia

Coroners service confirms first use of refrigerated morgue truck in B.C. to manage overflow of dead

The BCCoroners Servicehas confirmed that at least one refrigerated morgue truck hasbeen deployedto a site in the Fraser Health Authority region, where more than half of the province's COVID-19 deaths have occurred since the beginning of the pandemic.

Team commissions 3 trucks, canvas shelving as province faces dual health crises of COVID-19, overdoses

A body is moved to a waiting funeral home vehicle behind St. Paul's Hospital on Jan. 5. (Ben Nelms/CBC News )

The BCCoroners Servicehas confirmed that at least one refrigerated morgue truck hasbeen deployedto a site in the Fraser Health Authority region, where more than half of the province's COVID-19 deaths have occurred since the beginning of the pandemic.

B.C. hospitals reported in November that morgues were at maximum capacity,after months of being hit by the dual health crises ofthe pandemic and overdose deaths related to opioids.

"Imagine you are hit by a tsunami and an earthquake at the same time," said Dr. Jatinder Baidwan, chief medical officer of the BCCoroners Service.

To date, the Fraser Health region has reported 556 of the province's 988 deaths caused by COVID-19. On top of that, the region which includes the cities of Surrey, Burnaby, Abbotsford and Coquitlam saw a record 510 overdose deaths between January and November.

Last spring aprovincewide team was established to monitor and report on morguecapacity.The working group includes health officials, health authorities,the B.C. Funeral Home Association and BC Coroners Service.

The team developed a "strategic reserve" to expand existing storage space, includingthree refrigerated trucks each outfitted to hold up to 46 bodies and temporary canvas storage units.

A man wearing a bright red turban stands in front of the British Columbia coat of arms.
Dr. Jatinder Baidwan is chief medical officer with the BC Coroners Service. (Yvette Brend/CBC News)

In December the province "deployed and operationalized" one of those trucks as a "backup measure" in the Fraser Valley, according to health officials.

Baidwan confirmed at least one truck has been used in the Fraser Health region since December, but neither he nor the Ministry of Health providedfurther details.

Some of the canvas shelving units, which are used by the Canadian military and the United Nations in disaster zones,have been installed in some hospitals' existing morgues to add capacity.

Tracking capacity

The first thing the working groupdid in the spring was map morgue capacity, creating a data dashboard to track hot spots needing support, Baidwansaid.

Across B.C.'s health authorities there are a total of 1,069 short-termhospitalmorgue spaces, so private morgues,many connected to funeral homes,are often contracted.

Some morgues are running at 80 to 85 per cent occupancy what he refers to as the "red zone" and he'd like to see that reduced to 50 or 60 per cent.

"I don't think we've seen cracks [in the system]. What we've seen is strain,"said Baidwan.

Dignity the top priority

Theprovincehired ethicists and experts to participate in the working groupto helpfind respectful ways to further expand hospital morgues.

Baidwan said dignity was thetop priority throughout the planning process.

"I remember with horror the images I saw back in April, May last year of New York City, where there were these refrigerated trailers, and it still gives me tingles thinking about it," he said.

"People were, I guess, doing the best they could and unfortunately, what that meant was they were just putting bodies into the base of a unit. To me, that wasn't the right way of doing it."

Baidwan said when the usual infrastructureforhandling the dead isoverwhelmed, witnesses can betraumatized.

"Society is measured by the way it stands up to adversity and a measure of society is how it looks after its dead," he said.

Some of B.C.'s morgues are operating at 80 to 85 per cent capacity. (CBC News)

System 'pushed to its limits'

Jason Everden, president of the B.C. Funeral Association,said storage capacity has been an issue for years and the pandemic has simplyshone a light on the problem.

Ngaio Davis, founder of Koru Cremation Services in Vancouver, says the system for dealing with the dead has been"pushed to its limits."

"The coroners service for a number of years now has been scrambling to try to find enough space," said Davis.

One of her clients recently waited weeks for a body to be released for cremation, due to a delayed autopsy.

"Emotionally, it all just compounds the grief, the sadness, the anger. People are just in disbelief," said Davis.

A rising death rate is a reality for a province with a growing populationlike B.C. A record38,927 people died in B.C. between July 2019 and June 2020.