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A funeral home in France is overwhelmed by the rising death toll from France's heatwave

Undertaker Zouhaier Hertelli has received frantic?calls? from families, retirement communities, and the police, all desperate to find space in a refrigerated morgue for those who have died due to the heatwave that is sweeping France.

France's Public Health Agency said that there were at least 1,000 extra deaths between last Wednesday and Sunday. The numbers are not final, however, as they will likely increase.

Hertelli’s funeral home, located in Orly near Paris, can store 32 bodies. All are currently occupied. Hertelli pointed to the compartments with labels indicating the name of deceased, date of arrival at the funeral home, and temperature of storage.

He said, "We are completely full." The rush started Wednesday, Thursday, and all weekend long. "I received 150 calls over the weekend and had to turn down 150 bodies."

Meteo-France, the national weather forecaster, said that although temperatures have started to fall from record-highs, they remain around 30 degrees Celsius across the country and are expected to rise again at the weekend.

Families, nursing homes, police stations, and municipalities all call us. Hertelli stated that all of her colleagues in the funeral industry are contacting us.

'STATE COMPLETE PANIC

They're completely in panic, at the end of their wits. Imagine that your father or mother has started to decompose, and you are unable to care for it. We have no solution.

Hertelli asked local authorities for permission to use a refrigerator trailer to store additional bodies. The company warned that the increased number of deaths meant that burying and cremating bodies was often delayed. This means that some bodies may have to remain in cold storage units longer than normal.

He said that the mere waiting time is pushing back appointments to July 10.

France's public health authority and doctors have noted an increase in deaths of elderly people in their homes as well as in nursing homes. The public health authority and doctors in France have pointed out an increase in deaths of elderly people at home, as well as those who are living in nursing homes.

Sebastien Chopin, a doctor with SOS Medecins, said he was concerned about the possible impact of another heatwave on those who are already "weakened" by recent high temperatures.

In the heatwave of last week, he and his colleagues signed eight death certificates at people's houses in Melun south of Paris. This is four times more than they did in the same period last year. (Writing and editing by Ingrid Melander)

(source: Reuters)