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I can t grieve : LA families wait months to bury loved ones as Covid deaths rise

Johanna Matamoros’s father and mother died one month apart in December and January. But with Los Angeles funeral homes pushed to the brink due to the Covid-19 catastrophe, she may have to wait two to three months to bury them. “I’m not able to grieve. It is so painful,” she told the Guardian. Matamoros’s 56-year-old father, Asmel, died of Covid in December in El Salvador, where he had traveled to say goodbye to his dying mother. Her mother,.

Reciben premios ganadores de la revista Voces de mi Tierra | e-oaxaca com | Periódico Digital de Noticias de Oaxaca | México 2021

Reciben premios ganadores de la revista Voces de mi Tierra | e-oaxaca com | Periódico Digital de Noticias de Oaxaca | México 2021
e-oaxaca.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from e-oaxaca.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Pandemic: LA County cemetery, largest in North America, struggles with backlog of burials

North America s largest cemetery struggles with COVID deaths

Many patients who initially experienced milder COVID-19 symptoms are now showing up at the doctor s office months later with debilitating problems. They re being called long-haulers. Rose Hills officials say they are offering expedited burials, but that most families have been willing to wait for standard services. In the meantime, the cemetery has ramped up cold storage facilities for holding the backlog of bodies. We were on this a few months ago, expecting a potential surge, said Monroe. And so far, we ve been able to keep up with those demands. But in many cases the wait for burial services is compounded by the COVID-19 protocols in place leading up to a death. Rose Hills officials say many victims had already been separated from their families for weeks, even months.

Los Angeles County cemetery, North America s largest, struggles with backlog of burials amid pandemic

Many patients who initially experienced milder COVID-19 symptoms are now showing up at the doctor s office months later with debilitating problems. They re being called long-haulers. Rose Hills officials say they are offering expedited burials, but that most families have been willing to wait for standard services. In the meantime, the cemetery has ramped up cold storage facilities for holding the backlog of bodies. We were on this a few months ago, expecting a potential surge, said Monroe. And so far, we ve been able to keep up with those demands. But in many cases the wait for burial services is compounded by the COVID-19 protocols in place leading up to a death. Rose Hills officials say many victims had already been separated from their families for weeks, even months.

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