‘Dead’ woman comes back to life in morgue fridge
South African crash victim was undressed, weighed and then put in the fridge before worker noticed her breathing
A woman pronounced dead in a road accident near Johannesburg was discovered to be alive by a mortuary worker who pulled her body out of a fridge.
The unnamed female passenger was one of three people pronounced dead by paramedics who had been called to reports of an overturned vehicle on a road outside Carletonville, west of Johannesburg. After being examined she was taken to a nearby mortuary.
A mortuary employee told The Sowetan what happened next. As his colleagues started filling in paperwork for the deceased, one opened the refrigerated unit where cadavers are stored to check the bodies.
The Week
Escape your echo chamber. Get the facts behind the news, plus analysis from multiple perspectives.
Sign up for The Week's Free Newsletters
From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.
From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.
“When he pulled out the woman’s body, he saw that she was breathing,” the source said.
“You never expect to open a fridge and find someone there alive,” the employee added. “Can you image if we had begun the autopsy and killed her?”
The woman, who had suffered serious head injuries, was rushed to Leratong Hospital in nearby Krugersdorp, where she remains.
Ambulance company Distress Alert operations manager Gerrit Bradnick said that the presence of another private ambulance crew at the scene added to the chaos and that there was “no evidence” of negligence.
A free daily email with the biggest news stories of the day – and the best features from TheWeek.com
“Equipment used to determine life showed no form of life on the woman,” he said, adding: “A number of things can influence the detection of life, including cold, alcohol, drugs and injuries.”
“This did not happen because our paramedics are not properly trained.”
Bradnick said the reason for the mis-declaration was “a mystery”.
“Thinking about her injuries, how long she lay waiting for the mortuary officials, the trip back to the morgue, then how she would have been undressed, weighed and then put in the fridge… we are just thankful she is alive,” he told Times Live.
The Gauteng district health department is to investigate the incident.
-
Must-see bookshops around the UKThe Week Recommends Lose yourself in beautiful surroundings, whiling away the hours looking for a good book
-
A Nipah virus outbreak in India has brought back Covid-era surveillanceUnder the radar The disease can spread through animals and humans
-
Nasa’s new dark matter mapUnder the Radar High-resolution images may help scientists understand the ‘gravitational scaffolding into which everything else falls and is built into galaxies’
-
Israel retrieves final hostage’s body from GazaSpeed Read The 24-year-old police officer was killed during the initial Hamas attack
-
China’s Xi targets top general in growing purgeSpeed Read Zhang Youxia is being investigated over ‘grave violations’ of the law
-
Panama and Canada are negotiating over a crucial copper mineIn the Spotlight Panama is set to make a final decision on the mine this summer
-
Why Greenland’s natural resources are nearly impossible to mineThe Explainer The country’s natural landscape makes the task extremely difficult
-
Iran cuts internet as protests escalateSpeed Reada Government buildings across the country have been set on fire
-
US nabs ‘shadow’ tanker claimed by RussiaSpeed Read The ship was one of two vessels seized by the US military
-
How Bulgaria’s government fell amid mass protestsThe Explainer The country’s prime minister resigned as part of the fallout
-
Femicide: Italy’s newest crimeThe Explainer Landmark law to criminalise murder of a woman as an ‘act of hatred’ or ‘subjugation’ but critics say Italy is still deeply patriarchal