National Post

‘ IS THERE A DOCTOR ON BOARD?’ IT’S A QUESTION OFTEN HEARD ON AIRPLANES. BUT MOST PHYSICIANS ARE NOT EQUIPPED TO HANDLE ON- BOARD EMERGENCIE­S

— WHICH AIRLINES AND THE PROFESSION PLAN TO FIX.

- SHERYL UBELACKER

YOU CAN’T ... STOP TO SAY WHICH AIRSPACE ARE WE IN?

It’s a call for help that most physicians worry about when taking a flight: “Is there a doctor on board?” What it heralds is an urgent medical issue, usually involving a passenger, which can range from severe pain to a heart attack.

“Every health-care profession­al is likely to hear this call at some point while flying, but for most of us, treating patients on a plane is a completely unfamiliar scenario,” said Dr. Alun Ackery, an emergency physician at Toronto’s St. Michael’s Hospital, who co-authored recommenda­tions aimed at helping medical profession­als manage inflight emergencie­s.

Trying to treat an ill passenger in the dimly lit and cramped confines of an aircraft can be a daunting propositio­n, said Ackery, especially if a doctor is unaware of what inflight medical equipment is available. “When you’re in a moment of crisis, you don’t really want to be learning about what you have to help you,” he said.

The recommenda­tions, published Monday in the Canadian Medical Associatio­n Journal ( CMAJ), were developed in collaborat­ion with Air Canada and WestJet, which both carry comprehens­ive first aid kits.

“Each airline’s kit is going to look different, and the contents aren’t always going to be familiar, which adds another layer of complexity to an already stressful situation,” said Dr. David Kodama, an emergency medicine resident at the University of Toronto and a co- author of the recommenda­tions.

The kits contain a number of medication­s, saline, a blood pressure cuff, stethoscop­e and other basic equipment.

But the authors say the cabin environmen­t also changes how some of that equipment is used and how certain diagnostic results are interprete­d. For instance, a patient’s normal oxygen saturation is lower at altitude than on the ground and aircraft noise may make getting an accurate blood pressure reading using the cuff and stethoscop­e difficult.

“We want more physicians and health- care profession­als to read this ( CMAJ) article and gain some comfort in their ability to approach a medical problem on an aircraft,” said Ackery.

An estimated 2.75 billion passengers worldwide fly each year on commercial airlines, with about 133 million flyers in Canada in 2015, a 27- per- cent increase over 2009, the article states. The increasing number of pas- sengers is one reason for a rising incidence of inflight medical emergencie­s. Estimates range from one per every 604 flights to one per 7,700 passengers.

The top five causes of medical emergencie­s are l i ght- headedness/ l oss of consciousn­ess, respirator­y symptoms, nausea or vomiting, cardiac distress and seizures.

In Canada, Quebec is the only province that imposes a legal duty on physicians to come to the assistance of a person in a life- threatenin­g emergency, the authors say.

So what is a doctor’s ethical and legal obligation to step forward when a call goes out for medical aid on a flight?

Dr. Jeff Blackmer, vicepresid­ent of profession­alism at the Canadian Medical Associatio­n, said physicians are encouraged under the or- ganization’s code of ethics to provide “whatever assistance they can to any person with an urgent need for medical care.

“But there’s no l aw or regulation except in Quebec that requires a physician to do this,” he said.

There have a been some cases of Canadian doctors facing lawsuits after trying to help a sick passenger on their flight, but Blackmer said the Canadian Medical Protective Associatio­n, which provides legal defence and liability protection to physicians, does not provide blanket coverage in such cases. Such protection is decided on a caseby- case basis and one of the issues is what country’s airspace is involved.

“And it’s very different if you’re in Canada versus, say, over Russian airspace or subSaharan African airspace or American airspace what your liability may or may not be,” he said.

“You have to make a judgment whether to participat­e and then sometimes make life and death decisions in a very less than optimal environmen­t, with or without the necessary equipment.

“And you can’t sort of stop to say which airspace are we in?”

Blackmer, who flies a great deal and has frequently responded to calls to help a fellow passenger in medical distress, said many doctors struggle with the issue.

For instance, if a physician is on board a flight and has had a couple of alcoholic drinks and perhaps been awakened in the middle of the night, he or she may feel their judgment might be impaired and they could do more harm than good, he said. “So you can’t have a black- and- white statement that says doctors have an absolute ethical obligation ... It’s much more nuanced and complicate­d than that.”

 ?? TONY CALDWELL / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Trying to treat an ill passenger in the cramped confines of an aircraft can be a daunting task for doctors.
TONY CALDWELL / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Trying to treat an ill passenger in the cramped confines of an aircraft can be a daunting task for doctors.

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