Arik Air flight is in the news again and this time its not a stowaway
teenager in the tyre compartment rather the aircraft served as a
delivery center for a pregnant Nigerian woman.
The Arik Air flight with over 100 passengers en route to London Sunday
was forced to make an emergency landing in Palmas, Spain, as a woman
went into labour and gave birth while the aircraft was airborne.
The pilot was said to have requested the emergency landing on the advice
of two doctors who were on board the aircraft and had helped the mother
deliver the baby. After the birth of the child, the mother, whose
identity has so far been withheld, was said to have experienced
excessive hemorrhaging, necessitating the emergency landing.
At the time of this report, both mother and child
were said to have been stable but were left behind in Palmas for
monitoring by medical personnel, while the flight continued on its
journey to London.
The airline is still trying to ascertain if the woman had presented a
false medical report from her doctor on the true duration of her
pregnancy or she had gone into premature labour while on board the
flight.
Women with full term pregnancies are not allowed to travel by air,
according to International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO)
regulations. As such, intending pregnant passengers are required to
present medical reports certifying that they are less than 32 weeks pregnant before they are allowed to fly.
A source said the airline was carrying out a full-scale investigation to
ascertain the genuineness of the medical report presented by the woman.
Arik Air’s management said yesterday that if it is discovered that the
woman was given a false report to enable her fly, it would file a
special complaint against the
doctor who had issued the medical report to the Nigeria Medical
Association (NMA) for endangering her life and that of the baby, as well
that of other passengers on board the flight.
THISDAY learnt that when the passenger went into labour, the cabin crew had asked that doctors on board the flight to identify themselves. Following the announcement, two of the passengers came forward, saying they were doctors and assisted in the delivery of the baby.
But the airline did not know whether the decision to make an emergency
landing by the doctors was right, as it was not ascertained if the
medical personnel were O&G doctors (obstetrics and gynaecology) who might have been better at handling the emergency birth.
THISDAY
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