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Holocaust of the elderly: death toll in French heatwave rises to 10,000
The Independent UK ^ | August 22, 2003 | John Lichfield

Posted on 08/21/2003 8:16:41 PM PDT by Kay Soze

Holocaust of the elderly: death toll in French heatwave rises to 10,000
By John Lichfield in Paris
22 August 2003

The summer of 2003 will be remembered as the year of the holocaust of the French elderly.

France was reeling yesterday from figures that suggested some 10,000 people - mostly over the age of 75 - were killed by this month's heatwave, double the previous estimate.

As a political storm raged over blame for the deaths, President Jacques Chirac called an emergency cabinet meeting and promised an inquiry to examine "with complete openness" the failings of the health and welfare system.

Half the victims are believed to have died in old people's homes, many operating with fewer staff during the August holidays. Many hospitals had closed complete wards for the month and were unable to offer sophisticated, or sometimes even basic, treatment to victims. About 2,000 people are thought to have died in their homes from the effects of dehydration and other heat- related problems while neighbours and relatives were away.

Such was the death rate - described officially as a period of "surplus mortality" - that families are now having to wait for up to two weeks for a funeral because of a shortage of coffins, priests and grave-diggers.

M. Chirac, who has been criticisedfor refusing to break off his two-week holiday in Quebec, promised in a nationwide address yesterday that "everything will be done to correct the shortcomings" exposed by the disaster. "Many fragile people died alone in their homes," he admitted.

Senior health officials have claimed ministers reacted slowly to warnings in early August that a calamity was in the making, while the Health Minister, Jean-François Mattei, has insisted he was not given adequate advice. By the time he and the Prime Minister, Jean-Pierre Raffarin, broke off holidays last week and ordered the emergency recall of hospital staff, the worst of the 10-day heatwave was over. Earlier this week, the director general of health, Lucien Abenhaim, resigned, complaining ministers had ignored his warnings, including a plea that military and Red Cross hospitals should be commandeered to ease the burden on state hospitals.

Many healthcare professionals - including the doctor, former health minister and founder of Médécins Sans Frontières, Bernard Kouchner - said it had been a disaster waiting to happen. "We are all to blame," Dr Kouchner said, irritating many of his colleagues on the left, who had hoped the crisis would help them to destabilise the centre-right government and head off health reforms planned this autumn.

Dr Michel Dèsmaizieres, an emergency service doctor in Paris, told the newspaper Libération: "It is just not right to see [patients on] trolleys in the corridors, while whole wards were empty and locked up. In the retirement homes there were people with a body temperature of 42C [108F], for whom we could offer nothing but a little comfort."

M. Mattei, also a former doctor, reluctantly admitted earlier this week that as many as 5,000 extra deaths were recorded - 80 per cent of them old people - in the first half of this month. However, France's largest funeral directors' association has now calculated that there were at least 10,000 extra deaths in the period up to Wednesday of this week, many of them on 12 August when temperatures peaked at more than 100F (37.8C) in northern France. About half the extra deaths were in the Paris area.

Government officials described these figures as "plausible" but urged caution until an official investigation was completed next month.

Dr Marc Harboun, a specialist geriatrics from Ivry, near Paris, said: "This death rate is due to a lack of people and means to reduce the temperature [of the patients]. Medically, we could cope by increasing the dosage in transfusions but, for the other things we needed to do - making the patients drink, dampening them down - we didn't have the time."

Officials said 85 per cent of all public and private retirement homes in France were permanently understaffed. At holiday times, staffing levels fell even further.

One woman, Claude Guérin, described how she took her elderly aunt to a hospital on the Côte d'Azur, suffering from pulmonary problems brought on by the heat. "She was 96, but she was fighting fit before the heatwave," said Mme Guérin.

"At first she was put in an air-conditioned revival room but then she was abruptly transferred to a ward where it was 50C [122F]. I talked to two nurses. One said: 'I don't have time to bother with her.' The other said: 'Get her out of here.' But the doctors would not let her go. Three days later, she died."


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: france; french; governmenthealth; healthcare; liberalhealth; socialisim
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WOW!

So much for French liberal compassion.

So much for socialized health care.

the French spend more energy on being anti American than they do on aiding their own parents.

1 posted on 08/21/2003 8:16:41 PM PDT by Kay Soze
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To: Kay Soze
*BUMP* !
2 posted on 08/21/2003 8:23:54 PM PDT by ex-Texan (My tag line is broken !)
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To: Kay Soze
This is a terrible toll. The numbers are difficult to believe.
3 posted on 08/21/2003 8:24:10 PM PDT by MEG33
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To: Kay Soze
WOW!

French found a way to solve social security budget problems!

4 posted on 08/21/2003 8:26:43 PM PDT by mvonfr
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To: Kay Soze
Very well put!
5 posted on 08/21/2003 8:28:12 PM PDT by YaYa123 (@Thanks I needed that. com)
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To: Kay Soze
It's all the fault of George W. Bush. If he had signed Kyoto, this never would have happened. It just goes to show that Bush is a greater terrorist than Bin Ladin. Bush killed 10,000 French citizens while Bin Ladin only killed 3000 Americans. < /French idiocy >
6 posted on 08/21/2003 8:30:19 PM PDT by MediaMole
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To: Kay Soze
"the French spend more energy on being anti American than they do on aiding their own parents"

Don't forget the energy spent on all those vacations.
7 posted on 08/21/2003 8:31:03 PM PDT by claritas
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To: Kay Soze
The summer of 2003 will be remembered as the year of the holocaust of the French elderly.

Are they implying that A/C would have saved the Jews? How Reeeeeeeeetarded!

8 posted on 08/21/2003 8:32:17 PM PDT by gr8eman
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To: mvonfr
French found a way to solve social security budget problems!

I nominate that for most inappropriate post of 2003

9 posted on 08/21/2003 8:33:39 PM PDT by steve86
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To: Kay Soze
Just confirms what a bunch of wussies the Frogs are.

Oooo la-la! Le heat is too much for my delicate person!

10 posted on 08/21/2003 8:34:56 PM PDT by O.C. - Old Cracker (When the cracker gets old, you wind up with Old Cracker. - O.C.)
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To: claritas
"GIMME AN "A"...GIMME A "C"..." What's that spell you frickin morons?
11 posted on 08/21/2003 8:35:04 PM PDT by gr8eman
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To: Kay Soze
10,000?????

okay, so where are they storing the extra 10,000 bodies? That's at least 1,200,000 pounds of meat... are they stacking them in the streets?

Much as I enjoy bashing the frogs- this number seems a little suspect- kind of like "one billion wives beaten during the Super Bowl"

12 posted on 08/21/2003 8:38:35 PM PDT by fourdeuce82d
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To: Kay Soze
Once again, I must ask, if the French are not used to hot air, who in the hell is?
13 posted on 08/21/2003 8:39:21 PM PDT by Hoosier-Daddy
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To: Kay Soze
Liberals may be singing a different tune about global warming, after seeing how a mere heatwave is so benefical in reducing the cost of maintaining a socialist state.

14 posted on 08/21/2003 8:40:09 PM PDT by F.J. Mitchell (Our enemies within are very slick, but slime is always treacherously slick, isn't it?)
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To: F.J. Mitchell
Not to sure how to take that kind of humor.
15 posted on 08/21/2003 8:57:38 PM PDT by Cold Heat (Nothing in my home is French!)
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To: Kay Soze
I don't know what's true and what's not in this article. The numbers keep multipying daily so can we trust the French that the deaths are all from the heat? How many elderly die in France every month? Are the French such scum as not to check on their elderly relatives? Are the nursing homes and hospitals so bad they lock the doors or ignore thousands of patients? I'll give him that probably 80 of all deaths are of elderly and over 75, and that many people (especially the elderly) die in nursing homes and hospitals. But I don't buy it all.

Hey, wrap up in a wet towel and lounge in front of an opened fridge or is that too close to bathing?
16 posted on 08/21/2003 8:58:43 PM PDT by mtbopfuyn
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To: Kay Soze
Does anyone want to explain to me how you justify going off on vacation knowing there is nobody there to take your place? Or how about leaving your parents behind, alone, during a heat wave?

Didn't any of the neighbors even think about calling on their elderly neighbors to make sure they were OK? Where were the volunteers at the hospitals and old age homes who could have given these people spounge baths or cooled them down with alcohol?

17 posted on 08/21/2003 9:00:39 PM PDT by McGavin999
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To: Kay Soze
Chirac Goes On TV To Quell Heatwave Anger
18 posted on 08/21/2003 9:02:21 PM PDT by blam
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To: MEG33
My boss just came back from a tour of the Mediterranian. She had a short stop-over in France and even she could not believe how insufferably hot it was. Oppressively hot, to be exact.

Texans are used to the heat, believe me. We've had 100+ days for several weeks now, but somehow it still seemed hotter than that to her.

She couldn't take it for long periods of time; it wouldn't surprise me that elderly people would succumb to it.

19 posted on 08/21/2003 9:05:06 PM PDT by TheWriterInTexas (Under Seige - MWCF)
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To: mtbopfuyn
I live in La Quinta CA next to Palm Springs.

You know what the elderly do here when it it hits 100?

They play gold before noon and drink fewer martinis to reduce their dehydration!

And when it hits 118 they stay inside and drink at the cafes and country clubs.

But that the diff between a capitalist nation with great health care and a soicliaist nation with very poor health care.
20 posted on 08/21/2003 9:05:37 PM PDT by Kay Soze (Free Republic- a gathering place conservatism & even the "go along to get along Republicans".)
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