Home / Health / Mid-Air Surgery: Doctors Improvise to Save Life at 10,000 Metres
Mid-Air Surgery: Doctors Improvise to Save Life at 10,000 Metres
8 Feb
Summary
- Doctors performed emergency surgery mid-flight using improvised tools.
- An improvised valve from a water bottle saved a passenger's life.
- In-flight medical emergencies occur about once every 604 flights.

On a British Airways flight bound for London, a medical emergency unfolded when a passenger developed a life-threatening tension pneumothorax. Doctors Angus Wallace and Tom Wong, with limited medical supplies at 10,000 metres, resorted to improvisation.
They utilized items such as a urinary catheter, a water bottle for a one-way valve, and a coathanger sterilized in brandy to insert tubing into the patient's chest. This innovative intervention successfully released trapped air, leading to the patient's rapid recovery.
In-flight medical emergencies happen roughly once every 604 flights, with deaths being even rarer. Doctors responding to such calls face unique challenges, including limited equipment and the pressure of a captive audience, as exemplified by another incident involving an intern assessing a collapsed passenger.
Airlines like Qantas state they exceed regulatory requirements for medical kits, carrying advanced equipment to handle various situations. Despite the low frequency of serious incidents, doctors may hesitate to assist due to medico-legal concerns and unfamiliarity with critical care in an airborne environment.




