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France: More than 10,000 dead in record heat wave
By Francis Dubois
22 August 2003
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The unprecedented heat wave in Europe has caused many deaths
across the continent, but the highest number of victims has been
in France, where illness and death have reached epidemic proportions.
While the full extent of the health disaster has still to emerge,
the heavy death toll has led to a serious political crisis for
the French government. At the beginning of this week, the number
of deaths linked to the heat was estimated at 5,000, and this
figure was, according to medical experts, likely to rise, since
50 percent of the deaths have occurred outside hospitals and are
not yet accounted for.
Frances leading undertakers organisation reported on
Thursday that as many as 13,000 may have died from exposure to
the intense heat.
After unusually high temperatures throughout June and July,
the heat wave reached its peak between August 6 and August 11,
with temperatures soaring to 40 degrees Centigrade (104 degrees
Fahrenheit). In the course of the week, hospitals were thrown
into crisis, unable to cope with the increasing numbers of peoplemostly
the elderly and frail and those with chronic illnessesbrought
to them by the emergency services.
The number of deaths in the Paris region increased dramatically,
up to four times the number normally seen at this time of year.
Most deaths were from dehydration or heatstroke. For many of those
brought to hospital, it was already too late. According to one
estimate, 80 percent of those who died were over 75 years of age.
Hospitals eventually stopped admitting patients, and people
calling for ambulances were told they would have to cope where
they were. As a result, people died in hotels, in their homes
or, even more often, in old peoples homes. Homeless people
simply expired on the street.
Morgues and funeral homes ran out of space, and some of the
dead were left for days on end where they had perished.
To cope with the growing number of bodies, the government of
conservative Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin decided, on August
18, to open a central morgue in an old fruit and vegetable market
in Rungis, south of Paris. The improvised mortuary can house up
to 2,000 bodies.
This choice was a fitting symbol of the attitude of Raffarin
and President Jacques Chirac. For the thousands who had lost relatives
or friends, it had the effect of a further slap in the face.
The government ignored warnings by the meteorological office
and failed to anticipate the consequences of the intense and prolonged
heat in a country where few private homes or offices have air
conditioning. It compounded its dereliction by refusing to take
steps to cope with the crisis as it grew in urgency from day to
day.
Many doctors and health experts have pointed out that a good
number of the deaths could have been prevented. As early as August
7 there were warnings that the heat would have severe consequences
and calls for emergency plans to be put into place, but the government
remained totally passive. This led to an open conflict between
various branches of the health system and the government over
the developing disaster. In the second week of August the government
was obliged to answer accusations of negligence and indifference.
Instead of taking serious steps to meet the situation, the
governments response was to cite crisis management measures
based on a plan for responding to terrorist attacks or natural
disasters in general. Already by the first days of August, hospitals
and emergency services were reporting deaths caused by the heat,
but the government was still insisting as of the middle of the
second week in August that all such deaths were due to natural
causes.
This prompted Patrick Pelloux, the head of Frances emergency
doctors association, to say, They dare to talk about
natural deaths. I absolutely do not agree with saying that.
On August 11, the Ministry of Health was still maintaining
that emergency departments are not massively clogged
and the difficulties are comparable with previous years,
with the exception of some hospitals and one or two departments
in Ile de France (the Paris area).
Plan blanc (the White Plan), which is supposed
to make extra equipment, transport, staff and beds available in
emergency situations, was put into effect only on August 13, after
public criticism had grown louder and the peak of the heat wave
had been reached.
This situation was not simply the result of the governments
attitude over the last few weeks. As many doctors and health experts
pointed out, it was bound up with a lack of preventive measures,
which would have been relatively easy to implement, and a general
downgrading of the health service over the past 15 years. Hospitals
have been starved of funds. They have no margin to provide for
unanticipated situations, and lack the wherewithal to hire additional
staff.
According to Professor Pierre Carli, the head of the SAMU (Paris
ambulance service) at the Necker Hospital, and Professor Bruno
Riou, the head of emergencies at the Pitié Salpétrière
Hospital in Paris, the heat wave has highlighted in a dramatic
way a permanent shortage... If the situation [of victims of the
heat having no hospital bed] seems scandalous, it is indicative
of a daily scandal in many hospitals, even when there is no epidemic.
At the end of July, the association of emergency doctors had
warned that the cutback of hospital beds by 25 percent to 30 percent
during the summer vacation months had created a dangerous situation.
These summer closures were carried out to deal with a general
deficit in hospital beds.
The president of the association of directors of old peoples
homes, Pascal Champvert, denounced the lack of staff in
old peoples homes, and blamed this for the heavy death
toll in the heat wave. Thousands of old people are dead,
he said, because there arent enough staff in old peoples
homes. One knows that in this milieu ... lack of staff kills every
day. He demanded that the health minister restore the 100 million
euro credits meant for old peoples homes that had been frozen
at the beginning of 2003.
At one old peoples home in Vitry sur Seine, a doctor
explained that there was one nurse for 72 people, and some of
the staff was barely trained.
The government was put onto the defensive by the reaction its
indifference provoked. It responded with a mixture of arrogance
and ignorance. Damage control was the order of the day. At the
same time, it appealed to the opposition parties not to engage
in partisan polemics.
Forced to break off his holiday on August 14, Raffarin initially
blamed the mounting death toll on the public, denouncing families
for leaving elderly relatives on their own and without help while
they went on vacation. This charge was clearly contradicted by
the fact that half of the people who died were living in homes
for the elderly, and werent alone at all.
At the same time, he and his minister of health, Jean François
Mattei, pontificated about the need for solidarity and commiserationprecisely
what the government had failed to exhibit. Raffarin rushed to
an old peoples home in the Bourgogne area (one that hadnt
suffered any casualties) to try belatedly to answer criticisms
that his government had abandoned the old and the sick.
Mattei made statements redolent of the infamous words of Marie
Antoinette in 1789: Let them eat cake! He said in
an interview that the reason so many old people were dying from
the heat was that there were more of them around, as a result
of rising life expectancy.
One of the mantras of the government was that the heat wave
was not its responsibility. A government official was quoted as
demanding: Are you saying the governments role is
to give bottles of water to babies on motorway service areas?
The health minister attempted to deflect criticism by putting
the blame on his immediate underlings, arguing that his apparent
lack of concern was due to the fact that he hadnt been informed
of the seriousness of the crisis. He pointed the finger at the
Directorate General of Health (DGS), the department responsible
for supervising the health situation nationally. This led to the
resignation of the head of DGS, Lucien Abenhaïm, who in subsequent
interviews contested the governments version of events and
insisted that he had issued the necessary warnings in time.
In a crude attempt to bribe and soothe those who had to cope
with the crisisdoctors, nurses and the staff of old peoples
homesMattei promised a lump sum to staff who helped those
suffering from the heat.
The Raffarin government came to power last year in the aftermath
of the re-election of Chirac as president. The entire official
left of French politicsthe Socialists, the Communist Party,
the Greensas well as sections of the so-called far
left, openly campaigned for Chiracs re-election following
the defeat of the Socialist Party candidate, Lionel Jospin, in
the first round of the election at the hands of the National Front
fascist, Jean-Marie Le Pen. These left forces portrayed
Chirac, the most prominent leader of the traditional right-wing
parties, as the defender of democracy against Le Pen, and called
for working people to give him a massive mandate. The predictable
result was not only the re-election of Chirac as president, but
a sweeping victory for the right-wing parties in the parliamentary
election that followed soon after.
The present political crisis of both Raffarin and Chirac arising
from the heat wave demonstrates how isolated and weak the right-wing
government actually is, despite the large majority of right-wing
deputies in the National Assembly. Out of touch with the reality
faced by tens of millions of ordinary people and representing
the interests of a thin layer of the wealthy and super rich, it
rests on the narrowest of social bases.
The present health catastrophe has provided an ominous illustration
of the governments overall intentions with regard to Frances
health system, and made people more aware of what is to come than
Raffarin and Chirac would have liked. The crisis has erupted just
days before the government is set to launch a fundamental assault
on the health insurance system and the health service, attacking
the foundations of the health system as it has existed since the
end the Second World War.
The political crisis has emerged as well only weeks after the
government carried out an unprecedented attack on pension rights,
which was facilitated by the trade unions sabotage of a
mass movement of strikes and protests.
The reaction of the parties of the official left has been to
help contain the crisis of the Raffarin government. François
Hollande, the national secretary of the Socialist Party, has mildly
reproached the government, while the Greens have called for the
resignation of Mattei, and some left deputies have called for
a parliamentary inquiry into the management of the crisis by the
government.
The Stalinists of the Communist Party have called the governments
performance in the heat wave a fiasco, but have avoided
raising any political demands.
None of these parties are seriously questioning the policies
that led to the disaster, or pointing to the underlying failure
of the French capitalist system itself. This comes as no surprise,
since these same parties were implementing health care cuts when
they were in government only a year ago.
See Also:
Thousands die in European heat wave
[14 August 2003]
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