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Posts Tagged ‘burial’

Burial battle intensifies in Nepal

nepal flagScores of demonstrators flocked to the holiest Hindu shrine of Pashupatinath Monday to protest against the newly enforced ban on burying non-Hindus on the temple’s forested land even as the former Hindu kingdom’s culture minister warned the state would take tough steps to uphold the ban. “Today’s protest is just a symbolic one,” said Yograj [...]

Green funerals: Exit strategies

Innovations for a conservative industry

“WE CAN bury her, burn her, or dump her.” The lucrative business of running funeral homes is rarely as blunt as that portrayed by Monty Python, a British satirical television show, and certainly not a front for cannibalism. But burial rites in most of the modern world remain an expensive relic of 19th-century habit. The last big innovation was cremation, which is now under fire for its environmental costs. A study conducted in 2007 for Centennial Park, a cemetery in Australia, found cremations produce the equivalent of 160kg of CO2 per body. A cemetery burial emits a mere 39kg. But maintenance (mowing lawns and the like) makes the ultimate carbon footprint of burial bigger than cremation.

Both tend to make extravagant use of coffins made from valuable hardwoods such as oak and mahogany. In America the coffin may then go into a cumbersome and expensive burial vault. Unpleasant chemicals abound. A paper published in the Journal of Environmental Health in 2008, entitled “Drinking Grandma”, warned about the public-health risks of formaldehyde leaking from cemeteries into groundwater. Cremations are dirty too. Dental fillings mean that they account for as much as a fifth of Britain’s mercury emissions: regulations require crematoria to cut mercury emissions by half by 2012. …

Protests grow in Kaczynski burial row

Protests increased in Poland over the planned burial of President Lech Kaczynki and his wife Maria at a highly symbolic royal palace in Krakow. More than 2,000 people protested Wednesday evening in Krakow against the decision of church authorities to bury the couple in the crypt of Wawel castle, the Polish Press Agency PAP said.

Nadya Suleman Wanted To Attend Michael Jackson Burial

Hollywood’s elite came out for the private burial service for the King of Pop Michael Jackson. But at least one kooky celeb wasn’t in attendance — Octomom Nadya Suleman! The unstable mother of 14 reportedly penned a letter to The Jackson Family requesting an invitation to last night’s memorial at Glendale’s Forest Lawn Memorial Park [...]

Francesca Biller-Safran: Revolting Revelation: Michael Jackson Still Not Allowed Burial One Month after Death

It’s been more than a month since Michael Jackson’s demise, and still no burial, cremation, resting place, or any manifestation of the pop psyche term…

Catacombs may be swine flu morgue

Exeter city council plans to use 19th century burial chambers as emergency mortuary if pandemic worsens

A city council is considering using 19th century catacombs to store the bodies of swine flu victims if the outbreak worsens, it was confirmed today.

Exeter city council has identified the empty underground burial chambers, currently used as a tourist attraction, as a potential mortuary.

A council spokesman said the plan would be implemented if the crematorium and cemeteries could not keep up with funeral demands.

“We have some empty catacombs in an old cemetery in the city,” he said. “These are 19th century underground burial chambers which are normally a tourist attraction. They can, however, be safely used for their original purpose and allow us to temporarily store bodies in the remote possibility that the need should arise.”

So far at least 31 people have died in the UK after contracting the virus. Yesterday, the World Health Organisation said 800 people had now died worldwide from the H1N1 virus and as many as 2 billion people could eventually be infected.

Doctors have warned that NHS intensive care wards could be overwhelmed by severely ill swine flu patients if infection rates climb rapidly.

The growing pressure on critical care beds was underlined this week when a pregnant 26-year-old was flown from a hospital in Kilmarnock to Sweden for life-saving treatment because of a shortage of equipment in Britain. Sharon Pentleton’s family said she was gravely ill, but her doctors believe she has a good chance of recovery.

According to Dr Alan Hay, director of the WHO’s London-based world influenza centre, the first wave of UK infections is likely to peak within the next week or two before re-emerging in the winter.

Research published in the journal Anaesthesia suggests that when the peak comes, demand for intensive care beds could outstrip supply by 130% in some regions, while the demand for ventilators could exceed supply by 20%. Paediatric facilities are likely to become “quickly exhausted” as hospitals confront “massive excess demand”, according to experts in intensive care and anaesthesia from the University of Cambridge, the Intensive Care Society and St George’s Healthcare NHS trust in London.

The Department of Health said the NHS was prepared for the pandemic. “Guidance has been issued which contains information for primary and secondary care services in the UK on managing surge capacity and the prioritisation of services and patients during a widespread influenza outbreak,” a spokesman said.

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Kate Kelly: Medical Knowledge Used to Depend on Grave Robbing

Last week’s chilling discovery that bodies within Burr Oak Cemetery in Alsip, Illinois were routinely being dug up and moved so that the burial plots…