19 June 2014 | 16:37

Australia morgue refuses bodies as 'too fat'

viewings icon comments icon

ПОДЕЛИТЬСЯ

whatsapp button telegram button facebook button
©Reuters/Carlos Garcia Rawlins ©Reuters/Carlos Garcia Rawlins

An Australian funeral director had to store the body of a 200-kilogramme (441-pound) man in her car overnight after a morgue refused it for being too big, AFP reports.

whatsapp button telegram button facebook button copyLink button
Иконка комментария блок соц сети

An Australian funeral director had to store the body of a 200-kilogramme (441-pound) man in her car overnight after a morgue refused it for being too big, AFP reports.

Joanne Cummings said she had to drive for two hours back home with the corpse in her hearse, with the air-con going full blast to keep it cool.

"I actually had to turn around and drive two hours home to Roebourne (in Western Australia) and keep him in my car overnight," she told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

"I had to have the air-con up full and look after him that way, check on him every half hour, and the following morning we hired a sea container with a chiller unit in it."

Cummings, the co-owner of Pilbara Funeral Services in north-west Australia, said it was not the first time the Hedland Health Campus hospital had rejected large bodies.

She said a staff member described a 250-kilogramme dead man last year as "too fat, he can't go in the fridge".

"You can't say things like that -- imagine if this was your mother," Cummings told Port Hedland newspaper the North West Telegraph.

Western Australia's Country Health Service said the hospital's equipment could only handle bodies weighing up to 150 kilogrammes and that it would look into installing machinery that could take bodies of up to 300 kilogrammes.

"It is imperative that at all times a deceased person is treated with the utmost care and respect and viewings are arranged so as not to cause distress and inconvenience to grieving families," the service's regional director Ron Wynn said in a statement.

But Cummings dismissed his claim that the hospital could not take in larger bodies as a "load of crap".

"I could probably put a baby elephant in one of those fridges and it'd fit through the door, and they're refusing entry for a human being," she said.

"My issue is if that was your father, mother, partner ... you wouldn't want them refused entry into the mortuary."

Читайте также
Join Telegram Последние новости
EU expanded sanctions against Belarus
Kazhydromet warned residents of Almaty
Kazakhstan celebrates Independence Day
Tokayev honored energy sector workers
Sharp cold snap is coming to Kazakhstan
Forecasters warn Almaty residents
Tokayev arrived in Zhetysu region
Kazhydromet warned residents of Almaty
Лого TengriNews мобильная Лого TengriSport мобильная Лого TengriLife мобильная Лого TengriAuto мобильная Иконка меню мобильная
Иконка закрытия мобильного меню
Открыть TengriNews Открыть TengriLife Открыть TengriSport Открыть TengriTravel Открыть TengriGuide Открыть TengriEdu Открыть TengriAuto

Exchange Rates

 522.58  course up  549.54  course up  5.08  course up

 

Weather

 

Редакция Advertising
Социальные сети
Иконка Instagram footer Иконка Telegram footer Иконка Vkontakte footer Иконка Facebook footer Иконка Twitter footer Иконка Youtube footer Иконка TikTok footer Иконка WhatsApp footer