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Old 25th Jun 2020, 04:42
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snocrazee
 
Join Date: Jun 2020
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CPR on a plane

First Post,

I have followed this forum for many years because I have always been interested in flying. I am sure the many flight crews here have stories of CPR and medical emergencies on a plane. Please share what the flight crew experiences are. I will share my first experience and my thoughts running through my head of doing CPR on a airplane.

First off, I am a Respiratory Therapist at a hospital with over 25 years of experience. My wife is a Physician's Assistant at a clinic here in our town. We both see patients every day at our jobs.

We took a trip to see my parents in Texas very recently which was the worst trip of our lives. Diverted to Waco, TX to spend the night due to wind shear at DFW which honestly was scary descending into DFW but our pilot handled it well. Ubered from Waco, TX to Fort Worth, TX the next day to see my parents on our anniversary.

Long story short, on our return trip to Spokane, WA the flight attendant asked if any passengers were medical professionals. I hit the call button while my wife gave me the stink eye. Flight attendant was pretty shook up but asked if we had business cards. I said yes, and she said come with me. An older gentleman was slumped against the right airplane exit door past the bathroom. I actually saw him getting on the plane before we took off and thought to myself that he didn't look too good. Needless to say, I lifted his head to only see his eyes and told my wife we need to drag him out and put him flat on the floor. I checked his pulse after looking and seeing that he had agonal breathing. No pulse. Wife did mouth to mask breathing while I did chest compressions for the last thirty minutes of the flight.

My thoughts: This older gentleman was not going to make it (I have done CPR about 500 times at work the last 25 years). If we were in a hospital with a doctor they would have said stop a long time ago. But basic CPR class says keep going until you are physically exhausted or help arrives or you are in danger (we have all the CPR cards more advanced than basic).

Another note: It was my wife's first real time doing CPR and I did not know that. She told me she was losing it 15 minutes into it while doing the breathing. Her father passed away recently. I made her switch with me a bit. It bothers you looking into open eyes while giving breaths. The main flight attendant was shook up quite a bit but brought us everything they had on the plane. I did my best to explain to her what was happening and what we were doing to help calm her a bit. The AED is your friend. The gentleman did not need any shocks but also remember that the beeps it gives us are not his pulse but a tempo for us to keep while doing CPR (flight attendant thought it was his pulse on the AED). The oxygen tank is of no use unless someone is spontaneously breathing.

We arrived in Spokane, WA while doing CPR. The cockpit crew expedited to the gate where we physically picked the passenger up and took him up the jet way with the EMS crew to lay him in the terminal and continue CPR. Unfortunately the gentleman did not make it and they stopped CPR in the terminal.

Last thoughts: Coping skills. My wife is still shook up but it's my job to help her. Me: I learned to cope with death a long time ago. I am not hardened but told my wife that when he slipped away he was closer to heaven. I also told her that if it was our family member on that plane that we were the best two people on that plane to give him a chance. That makes us feel better about it. I have no idea what the pilots are thinking when the flight attendant says someone is doing CPR on a passenger. I suppose they are thinking get the plane on the ground. Not looking for a thanks at all. We wished it was a happy ending but it wasn't. Anyone have any thoughts or experiences? What do pilots think when this happens?
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