At least 109 people have died in a single day in Paris, where temperatures rose above 40C Hospitals and funeral homes are overwhelmed amid an extreme heatwave in Paris, where at least 109 heat-related deaths were recorded on Friday alone, Franceinfo has reported, citing emergency medical services.Temperatures rose above 40C in France this week, triggering the highest heat alert in parts of the country. Medical services covering Paris and neighboring departments recorded around 3,400 calls over the past week, an 80% increase from normal levels, while emergency room visits rose 36%, according to Paris public hospitals. Franceinfo said medics responded to at least 30 cardiac arrests, including one involving a patient suffering from hyperthermia whose body temperature reached 43.7C.Catherine Legall, head of the emergency department at Argenteuil Hospital in the Greater Paris region, told Le Monde that her hospital had seen “an extremely sudden surge” in deaths after a week of extreme temperatures, recording six fatalities in a single night.Gautier Caton, a spokesman for the National Federation of Funeral Services (FNF), told CNews that funeral homes in Paris were either full or nearing capacity. He added that funeral homes were forced to offer families the option of transporting the remains of their loved ones to other regions. Read more Hundreds dead across Europe as heatwave shatters records According to RTL, funeral service providers in other cities, including Orleans and Nantes, also experienced a surge.Although the final death toll is not expected to be released until the end of the year, Health Minister Stephanie Rist warned on Friday that the heatwave was likely to cause excess mortality, noting that emergency medical interventions had risen by 122% compared with the same period in 2025.Interior Minister Laurent Nunez said 74 people had drowned in rivers, ponds and swimming pools across the country since the heatwave began on June 18.Extreme temperatures have spread across Europe, bringing record highs to Denmark, Switzerland, and the Czech Republic, while Germany’s Deutsche Bahn advised against non-essential train travel because of heat-related disruption to the country’s rail network.US Energy Secretary Chris Wright, however, downplayed the situation, arguing at an event this week that “always more people die in the winter than die in the summer, because cold is a vastly larger killer than heat is,” according to Politico.