Take a 10 hour flight to Australia, and sit in urine throughout the whole flight! There were also

Mondo Social Updated on 2024-02-04

Flying is one of the most modern ways to get around. For everyone in New Zealand and Australia, if you want to go abroad, either by boat or by plane, most people can only choose one of the two.

In the process of taking the plane, it is inevitable to encounter some unpleasant things, such as bad seats and smells on the plane.

No, a while ago, a couple met: they were traveling on Qantas, only to find that the seats were full of urine, and they "sat in urine" for 10 hours!

Not long before this happened, there was another incident that made everyone very helpless and sad - an elderly man died suddenly during the flight, and his body was left in his seat for several hours ......

01 The mentality collapsed!

The couple flew for 10 hours on Qantas and "sat in urine" the whole time...Flying is a normal thing for everyone. But if you sit too much, you will encounter all kinds of unhappy things (referring to some services, arrangements, etc.). No, not long ago, a couple met.

The couple flew from Bangkok to Sydney on a Qantas airliner, a journey time of 9 hours and 30 minutes. After getting on the plane, they put personal items such as neck pillows and shopping bags on the ground so that they could put other items in the luggage rack, only to find them wet when they retrieved the items on the ground. Not only that, but Qantas pillows are also wet.

At first, thinking it was just water, they put the shopping bag in the luggage rack, dried the neck pillow and prepared to use it, and Qantas changed the pillow for them. Not long after, they found a strip of children** under the seat....They were momentarily stunned, and then they realized that the neck pillow and shopping bag were not water at all, but urine ......"We thought it was just water at first, but we ended up sitting in the urine for 10 hours, and I kept using that neck pillow. Later, they lost their neck pillow and some of their personal belongings.

In response to this, Qantas initially said that it could compensate 10,000 Qantas points, but they refused and filed a complaint asking for a refund of the ticket fee. Qantas didn't initially agree, but "in good faith" eventually refunded them.

Someone died on the plane, the body was left in the original seat, and the plane that collapsed in the adjacent seat for 10 hours was uncomfortable enough, but I didn't expect to encounter this kind of thing, which is really helpless.

Thankfully, the couple complained in time and the airline compensated, but for the other couple, the psychological pressure may be even more ......The couple flew from Doha on the Persian Gulf to Australia on a Qatar flight that took a total of 14 hours.

But the plane flew for several hours, and an elderly passenger in the back seat of them, died suddenly. "Suddenly there was a strange sound behind us, and we looked around and thought it was the female elder sitting in the back," the couple recalled. ”

Out of concern, they asked the flight attendant to check the physical condition of the backseat passengers. The flight attendant tried to wake up the passenger, but was unsuccessful. Perhaps sensing something was wrong, he removed his oxygen mask and tried to provide oxygen, but Sharon did not show any respiratory symptoms. The crew then lifted the passenger away, performed CPR at the tail of the cabin, and radiographed a doctor. The end result was that they helped the passenger back to his seat and covered his body with a blanket.

After the plane successfully landed, the crew informed everyone that there had been a medical emergency, and at this time, the couple reacted in surprise: the old man had passed away.

The probability of how the crew will handle the death of a passenger in the cabin is very low, about 3 in 1,000, despite the fact that the aircraft will also be equipped with emergency medical equipment. Airlines will also require cabin crew to have relevant first aid skills. If a passenger on board requires emergency medical surgery, the first option for the crew is to find a paramedic via radio.

If there are no medical personnel on board, the cabin crew will perform emergency rescue measures, including cardiopulmonary resuscitation. However, if a passenger is "presumed dead", i.e. no breathing, no heartbeat, no pulse, no consciousness, no reaction, the crew can only report the situation to the captain, who then contacts the ground to prepare medical assistance after landing.

In this case, given that the passenger has been confirmed to be largely dead, the aircraft will not normally look for the nearest landing point to make an alternate landing. Passengers who have been presumed dead will be transferred to a vacant seat where conditions permit. This is prioritized after the aircraft has landed. Today's conclusionTraveling by plane, especially long-distance, is physically and mentally exhausting, and if you still encounter bad service, you will really collapse.

Fortunately, the couple has sought compensation and has also succeeded in making a claim. But for the old man who passed away, it was really unfortunate, and the passengers in the front and rear rows were also shocked, but in the closed cabin at an altitude of 10,000 meters, there was not much the crew could do. What do you think about this?

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