Relative Complains After Death on Flight

Team Infidel

Forum Spin Doctor
I smell LAW SUITE!!!!!!

NEW YORK (AP) - An American Airlines passenger died after a flight attendant told her he couldn't give her any oxygen and then tried to help her with faulty equipment, including an empty oxygen tank, a relative said.
The airline confirmed the flight death and said medical professionals had tried to save the passenger, Carine Desir, who was returning home to Brooklyn from Haiti.
Desir, who had heart disease, died of natural causes, medical examiner's office spokeswoman Ellen Borakove said Sunday.
Desir had complained of not feeling well and being very thirsty on the Friday flight from Port-au-Prince after she ate a meal, according to Antonio Oliver, a cousin who was traveling with her and her brother Joel Desir. A flight attendant gave her water, he said.
A few minutes later, Desir said she was having trouble breathing and asked for oxygen, but a flight attendant twice refused her request, Oliver said Sunday in a telephone interview.
After the flight attendant refused to administer oxygen to Desir, she became distressed, pleading, "Don't let me die," Oliver recalled.
Other passengers aboard Flight 896 became agitated over the situation, he said, and the flight attendant, apparently after phone consultation with the cockpit, tried to administer oxygen from a portable tank and mask, but the tank was empty.
Two doctors and two nurses were aboard and tried to administer oxygen from a second tank, which also was empty, Oliver said.
Desir was put on the floor, and a nurse tried CPR, to no avail, Oliver said. A "box," possibly a defibrillator, also was applied but didn't function effectively, he said.
"I cannot believe what is happening on the plane," he said, sobbing. "She cannot get up, and nothing on the plane works."
Oliver said he then asked for the plane to "land right away so I can get her to a hospital," and the pilot agreed to divert to Miami, 45 minutes away. But during that time, Desir died, Oliver said.
"Her last words were, 'I cannot breathe,'" he said.
Desir, 44, was pronounced dead by one of the doctors, Joel Shulkin, and the flight continued to Kennedy International Airport without stopping in Miami, with the woman's body moved to the floor of the first-class section and covered with a blanket, Oliver said. American Airlines spokeswoman Sonja Whitemon wouldn't comment Sunday on Oliver's claims of faulty medical equipment. Shulkin, through his attorney, Justin Nadeau, declined to comment on the incident out of respect for Desir's family. American Airlines, a unit of AMR Corp. and based in Fort Worth, Texas, is the largest domestic airline.
 
Empty oxygen bottle... doesn't work too well when it's empty now does it?
The Airline companies suck anyway. Sue 'em down to their underwear. Improve Haiti's economy while they're at it.
 
Really, really sad. It doesn't seem like they even cared about the woman's life at all. They deserve to get sued.
 
what they are going to have to prove is the fact that even though the equipment didn't work, if it did, would she have lived or died.
 
what they are going to have to prove is the fact that even though the equipment didn't work, if it did, would she have lived or died.


And there is the crux of the matter. IMHO the airline should be sued for not having the proper emergency supplies on hand (if they are even required to have them at all). But that is all. The airline attendant (as far as I know) is not qualified to administer oxygen to anyone. Many variables that will have to be hashed out in court I am sure if it comes to that.
 
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