Beverly Coon visited Oahu every November until she was diagnosed with breast cancer.
The 65-year-old former systems analyst for the U.S. Department of Defense loved going to the North Shore to watch surf contests. She enjoyed local food and sipping mai tais while watching the sunset from the Hale Koa Hotel in Waikiki.
When the cancer spread to brain, Coon’s doctor told her that her life was coming to an end. He gave her two weeks to live, maybe eight.
She booked a month-long trip to her 鈥渇avorite place on earth鈥 with her boyfriend.
鈥It was her all-time favorite place to go,鈥 says Dawn Stout, Coon鈥檚 daughter. 鈥淚 think she had it in her mind that that鈥檚 where she wanted to die.鈥
Stout and her husband, Greg, followed Coon听to Hawaii. They spent several days with her before returning to Indiana.
Coon died less than a week later, on Sept. 24, 2014. It took two weeks of dealing with officials in Hawaii and Indiana to get her body back home.
鈥淲e kind of had it in the back of our minds that it might be the last time we saw her alive,鈥 Stout said.
Coon was听one of dozens听of visitors who die in Hawaii each year. Some are killed in accidents, including drownings, falls while hiking or car wrecks. But, like Coon, many others pass away from an illness or health problem.
But whether a sudden accident or a terminal illness, it’s the relatives who must deal with the sad details听of getting the body home for a funeral or memorial service.
It’s an often tedious process and one that can also be costly — as much as $10,000, according to organizations that help the grieving families whose loved one has died far from home.
When the worst happens, 鈥渢he one thing that all the visitors have in common is they want to get the body back as soon as possible,鈥 said Jessica Lani Rich, president and CEO of the nonprofit .
Based on Oahu, the society works closely with visitors when something bad happens during a vacation, including when someone dies or is hospitalized.
Rich鈥檚 organization has been helping families for more than a decade. It’s often the first to get a call from the Honolulu Police Department or the Medical Examiner鈥檚 Office.
鈥淯sually on a Sunday I鈥檒l get a call to come to the ER 鈥 that a visitor has passed away,鈥 Rich said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e primarily there 鈥 for moral support at first, just to let them have a shoulder to cry on.鈥
If a visitor dies while traveling alone, the Medical Examiner’s Office will notify relatives back home.
But most of the time visitors are traveling with relatives or friends, so it’s easy to identify the deceased and notify the family.
Rich helps by coordinating transportation between hospitals, hotels and mortuaries for grieving听travel companions.
鈥淎 lot of times I鈥檝e taken them to the mortuary, (especially) if it鈥檚 a woman alone to make the arrangements, because it鈥檚 very painful,鈥 Rich said. 鈥淚鈥檓 even there when they put the body in the bag, and the wife will watch the husband go away, and that鈥檚 really difficult.鈥
The mortuary handles the details of sending bodies听home.
Blanca Acevez, a funeral director and embalmer at the nonprofit Oahu Mortuary, says she works with at least one visitor every couple weeks. She said she tries to get bodies home听in the quickest, least expensive way possible.
But that can take听weeks, Acevez said.
The medical examiner performs an autopsy even if the death is apparently from natural causes.
Cremation is the simplest option, and costs less than $1,000. It costs about $3,000 to embalm and send a body to the mainland, which includes the cost of air travel, Acevez says.
Normally, Acevez sends loved ones back to the mainland in an 鈥渁lternative container鈥 鈥 a reinforced cardboard box 鈥 to keep shipping costs down.
Sending a body to a foreign country is more complicated, depending on that country’s requirements, Acevez said. All bodies sent abroad must be embalmed and transported in a sealed casket, which costs more because of the added weight.
A few weeks ago, Acevez helped send a man’s body back to Australia. It was an 鈥渆asy鈥 process that took about five days and cost the family $7,000, she said.
If families choose a for-profit mortuary, costs can start at around $7,000 to get their loved one back to the mainland. Either way, the family is also responsible for the funeral costs back home.
Tullia Marcolongo, director of programs and development for the , recommends that visitors, especially those with pre-existing conditions, buy travel health insurance that would adequately cover expenses in the event of health problems or death.听
鈥淭hey may find themselves in a difficult situation having to pay for medical bills that they thought were covered,鈥 Marcolongo said.
Most people traveling to Hawaii aren’t thinking they’ll get sick or or die on vacation. But in fact, the risk of health problems actually rises on trips like these.
For one thing, vacationers may be less likely to seek medical care听for ailments听that initially seem minor.
According to a study by the that analyzed travelers鈥 behavior from 2000 to 2010, nearly half of more than听900听million international tourists became ill at some point while traveling. But only 8 percent sought medical care.
Nearly half of Hawaii’s visitors who drowned in the last 10 years had pre-existing heart conditions.
“Language barriers, including the inability to be understood, different medical standards, and anxiety navigating the local health system are some challenges that travelers face,” Marcolongo said. “Some travelers may decide that they are not sick enough to seek medical attention.”
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Part 1
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Part 2
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Part 3
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Part 4
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Part 5
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