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Funeral homes face PPE shortage as COVID crisis continues

From Langley across the country, funeral professionals need PPE to stay safe
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Ian Elliott of Arbutus Funeral Services in Langley is worried about running out of basic supplies like protective gloves. Across B.C., funeral homes are having trouble sourcing more PPE. (Matthew Claxton/Langley Advance Times)

Funeral homes in Langley and across the province are facing a potential shortage of personal protective equipment even as they have to transport and prepare for burial those who may have died of the coronavirus.

Ian Elliott of Langleysa国际传媒檚 Arbutus Funeral Services knows the difficulties of holding a funeral in a time of physical distancing.

His firm isnsa国际传媒檛 holding indoor funerals, with graveside services for a few people the only option for many right now.

But the work funeral homes provide behind the scenes is becoming increasingly difficult because of a worry about running out of PPE.

When someone dies in a hospital or care home, itsa国际传媒檚 funeral homes that undertake transport and get the bodies of the deceased to the funeral, the grave site, or a crematorium.

Itsa国际传媒檚 unknown if theresa国际传媒檚 any danger of contracting COVID-19 from a deceased person, so theresa国际传媒檚 no way of knowing if itsa国际传媒檚 safe to handle them. And because PPE is almost entirely disposable, users go through it quickly.

sa国际传媒淗ospital professionals are your first line of defence,sa国际传媒 said Elliott. sa国际传媒淔uneral professionals are your last line of defence.sa国际传媒

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Workers are worried about possible exposure to COVID-19 in the course of their duties.

sa国际传媒淢y suppliers who I deal with, they supply all my masks and gloves, they are completely out of the N95 masks, any other masks, the face shields,sa国际传媒 said Elliott.

Even simple items like hand sanitizer are either hard to find or have shot up in price, he said.

Funeral professionals were listed by the B.C. government among groups that need PPE to do their jobs sa国际传媒 but Elliott said they were located on page four of the list, near the bottom.

It isnsa国际传媒檛 just a problem for Arbutus or other small, local firms.

sa国际传媒淥ur profession, right across Canada and the U.S. for that matter, PPE is hard to come by for sure,sa国际传媒 said Jason Everden, president of the B.C. Funeral Association.

He said itsa国际传媒檚 big, international firms as well as the family-owned funeral homes facing the crunch.

The funeral supply firms that sold equipment, including PPE, to most chains and funeral homes, ran out of PPE early on in the crisis. Other PPE suppliers started limiting orders.

sa国际传媒淎nd then, everyone was out,sa国际传媒 he said.

sa国际传媒淭heysa国际传媒檝e got less than three months supply, on average,sa国际传媒 Everden said of funeral homes in B.C.

The association managed to get some PPE for its members by going through dental suppliers, who were sitting on some gloves and other items after dentists shut their doors.

What PPE is available is now often doubling in cost, with prices still volatile.

Everden acknowledges that doctors and nurses need the PPE first.

sa国际传媒淏ut we also need it to protect our staff.sa国际传媒



Matthew Claxton

About the Author: Matthew Claxton

Raised in Langley, as a journalist today I focus on local politics, crime and homelessness.
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