Common Funeral Myths
1. Embalming is required by law. Embalming is NEVER required for the
first 24 hours. In many states, it's not required at all under any circumstances.
Refrigeration is almost always an alternative to embalming if there
will be a delay before final disposition.
2. Embalming protects the public health. There is NO public health purpose
served by embalming. In fact, the embalming process may create a health
hazard by exposing embalmers to disease and toxic chemicals. In many
cases, disease can still be found in an embalmed body. A dead body is
less of a threat to public health than a live one that is still coughing
and breathing.
3. An embalmed body will last like the "beautiful memory picture"
forever. Mortuary-type embalming is meant to hold the body only for
a week or so. Ultimately, the body will decompose, even if it has been
embalmed. Temperature and climate are more influential factors affecting
the rate of decomposition.
4. Viewing is necessary for "closure" after a death. When
the death has been anticipated, family members have already started
their "good-byes." There is relatively little need to see
the body to accept the reality of death. In fact, according to a 1990
Wirthlin study commissioned by the funeral industry, 32% of those interviewed
found the viewing experience an unpleasant one for various reasons.
5. "Protective" caskets help to preserve the body. While gasketed
caskets may keep out air, water, and other outside elements for a while,
the body will decompose regardless. In fact, a gasketed or "sealer"
casket interferes with the natural dehydration that would otherwise
occur. Fluids are released from the body as it begins to decompose,
and the casket is likely to rust out from the inside.
6. "Protective" or sealed vaults help to preserve the body.
Nothing the traditional funeral industry sells will preserve the body
forever. If there is a flood, however, such vaults have popped out of
the ground and floated away. (Mass graves after the plague in England
were ultimately found to be without health problems, according to the
1995 British health journal Communicable Disease Report. Burial in containers,
however, often kept the disease "encapsulated.")
7. Coffin vaults are required by law. NO state has a law requiring burial
vaults. Most cemeteries, however, do have such regulations because the
vault keeps the grave from sinking in after decomposition of the body
and casket, reducing maintenance for the cemetery workers. Grave liners
are usually less expensive than vaults. New York state forbids cemeteries
from requiring vaults or liners, in deference to religious traditions
that require burial directly in the earth. Those who have started "green"
burial grounds do not permit vaults or metal caskets.
8. Vaults are required for the interment of cremated remains. Alas,
with the increasing cremation rate, many cemeteries are making this
claim, no doubt to generate more income. There is no similar safety
reason as claimed for using a casket vault. Any cemetery trying to force
such a purchase should be reported to the Federal Trade Commission for
unfair marketing practices: 877-FTC-HELP.
9. What is left after the cremation process are ashes. When people think
of "ashes" they envision what you'd find in the fireplace
or what's left over after a campfire. However, what remains after the
cremation process are bone fragments, like broken seashells. These are
pulverized to a small dimension, not unlike aquarium gravel.
10. Cremated remains must be placed in an urn and interred in a cemetery
lot or niche. There is no reason you can't keep the cremated remains
in the cardboard or plastic box that comes from the crematory. In ALL
states it is legal to scatter or bury cremated remains on private property
(with the land-owner's permission). Cremation is considered "final
disposition" because there is no longer any health hazard. There
are no "cremains police" checking on what you do with cremated
remains.
11. It is a good
idea to prepay for a funeral, to lock in prices. Funeral directors selling
preneed funerals expect the interest on your money to pay for any increase
in prices. They wouldn't let you prepay unless there was some benefit
for the funeral home, such as capturing more market share or being allowed
to pocket some of your money now. Prepaid funeral money is NOT well-protected
against embezzlement in most states. Furthermore, if you were to move,
die while traveling, or simply change your mind-from body burial to
cremation, perhaps-you may not get all your money back or transferred
to a new funeral home. The interest on your money, in a pay-on-death
account at your own bank, should keep up with inflation and will let
you stay in control. Please note: We're seeing more low-cost, low-overhead
funeral operations opening up, so prices may go down in the future in
areas with open price competition.
12. With a preneed contract, I took care of everything. There are over
20 items found on many final funeral bills that cannot be included in
a preneed contract because these items are purchased from third parties
and cannot be calculated prior to death. Extra charges after an autopsy,
clergy honoraria, obituary notices, flowers, the crematory fee or grave
opening are typical examples. All such items will be paid for by the
decedent's estate or family, in addition to what has already been paid
for in the preneed contract.
13. Insurance is a good way to pay for a funeral. Interest accrued by
an insurance policy may be outpaced by funeral inflation and is generally
less than what is earned by money in a trust. When a funeral is paid
for with funeral insurance, either the funeral director will absorb
the loss (and many reluctantly do)-OR figure out a way for your survivors
to pay a little more: "The casket your mother picked out is no
longer available. You'll have to pick out a new one, and the price has
gone up."
If what you have is life insurance, not funeral insurance, it may be
considered an asset when applying for Medicaid. In that case, you'll
have to cash it in, getting pennies on the dollar. The same may be true
if you're making time payments on your funeral insurance, and, in hard
times, you decide to stop making payments. In fact, the company may
be able to keep everything you paid, as "liquidated damages."
14. If you have a Living Will you won't linger on with a lot of feeding
tubes and extraordinary measures. One of the findings from a major study
supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation was that hospitals often
fail to comply with Living Wills. The Living Will is more likely to
be honored when there is an aggressive family member to intercede, especially
if that person also has a Durable Power of Attorney for Health Care
Information from
Common Funeral Myths
http://www.funerals.org/faq/myths.htm