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ILBS, AIIMS Doctors Revive 2 Year Old Child Who Stopped Breathing Mid-Air In Delhi Bound Vistara Flight

There were 4 resident doctors from the All India Institute of Medical Sciences and one from the Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences on the flight when a 2-year-old child stopped breathing mid-air. The doctors performed a cardiopulmonary resuscitation on the child who had undergone open-heart surgery recently.

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Doctors Revive 2 Year Old Child Who Stopped Breathing Mid-Air on Vistara flight (representative image)
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Five doctors were present on the flight where a two-year-old girl stopped breathing mid-air while travelling from Bengaluru to Delhi. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation was performed on the child after the crew made an emergency announcement by the doctors on board 

According to officials, the flight took off at 9 pm on Sunday and around 30 minutes after take-off, a distress announcement was made to seek help from any doctor available on board. 

There were four resident doctors of the All India Institute of Medical Sciences and one from the Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences.

AIIMS on their official X handle wrote, "While returning from ISVIR- on board Bangalore to Delhi flight Sunday evening, in Vistara Airline flight UK-814- A distress call was announced. It was a 2-year-old cyanotic female child who was operated outside for intracardiac repair, was unconscious and cyanosed."

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It further added the names of the doctors present on the flight, "Dr Navdeep Kaur, senior resident, Anesthesia; Dr Damandeep Singh, senior resident, Cardiac Radiology; Dr Rishab Jain, ex-senior resident, AIIMS Radiology; Dr Oishika, senior resident, OBG' and Dr Avichala Taxak, senior resident, Cardiac Radiology were on board."

What happened to the 2-year-old child?

The 2-year-old child underwent an open-heart surgery three weeks back due to a complex congenital heart disease (Dextrocardia, situs inversus and total anomalous pulmonary venous connection), reportedly said one among the five resident doctors.  

He said the child was immediately examined, adding that her pulse was absent and extremities were cold. He said the child was not breathing with cyanosed lips and fingers. 

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The doctor further described their procedure of saving the child mid-flight, he said, "Immediate CPR was started mid-air, and with limited resources, using skilled work and active management by the team. Successfully IV canulla was placed, oropharyngeal airway was put and emergency response was initiated by the whole team of residents on board. The child was brought to ROSC- return of circulation."

He added that the exercise was complicated by another cardiac arrest for which an AED (automated external defibrillator) was used, and the child was finally resuscitated. 

The flight was routed to Nagpur and the child was handed over to a pediatrician there in a stable condition.  

Another doctor further explained the situation, "The child's airway was maintained using three maneuvers -- head tilt, jaw thrust and chin lift -- and positive pressure ventilation was initiated using on board available face mask (adult size) attached to AMBU bag and pediatric oropharyngeal airway. 

"Chest compressions were given according to pediatric life support protocol. To connect oxygen cylinder to the AMBU bag, tubing which was required was harvested from on-board available emergency oxygen mask. In the extreme harsh circumstances with limited availability, an I.V line was secured in first attempt and emergency drugs (Adrenaline) were given as per the weight of child every three to five minutes. On board available AED was skillfully utilized to deliver cardiac shock, and further CPR was continued," he explained.

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Reaction

Union Health Minister Mansukh Mandaviya congratulated the doctors for saving a precious life. He wrote on X, "Kudos to the team of doctors of @AIIMS_NewDelhi for their heroic life-saving efforts on the flight and for saving a precious life. Your inspiring act has shown why doctors are called second to God on earth."

"Praying for the good health and quick recovery of the kid," he added. 

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