Posted on 03/18/2007 8:45:53 PM PDT by NormsRevenge
LONDON (AFP) - British Airways has apologised after placing the body of a woman who died three hours into a London-New Delhi flight in a vacant first-class seat, media reports said Monday.
After the elderly woman died, the flight's cabin crew moved her from her economy class seat into a vacant first class seat, strapped her in with a seatbelt and propped her up with pillows.
Her daughter was given a vacant seat next to her, and reportedly spent most of the remaining five-odd hours of the flight wailing and in tears.
A passenger seated nearest to the corpse, identified by the Daily Mirror only as Paul, told the paper of how the crew had not informed him that the woman had died mid-flight.
"I went to the galley and said, 'She doesn't look too well'," the 54-year-old businessman told the Mirror.
"The crew told me, 'We put out a call to the doctor but it was too late. She's expired.'"
He added that "because of turbulence it (the body) kept slipping down on to the floor. It was horrific."
A spokesman for BA was quoted by the Mirror as saying: "We apologise, but our crew were working in difficult circumstances and chose the option they thought would cause least disruption."
According to The Guardian, about 10 people a year die on BA flights, and the airline acted in a similar fashion when an American traveller died half-way through a six-hour London-Boston flight in November.
The man was covered with a blanket and strapped into a reclining first-class seat.
Too good to pass up.
Oh, I can't believe you went there...;-)
I've been on a lot of flights that made me wish I was dead, but still, what a terrible way to go.
In any case, my idea really isn't that practical, I guess. For one thing cannonballs are heavy and you'd have to explain to the passengers that they're only for the dead bodies. I don't see how you could work that happily into the pre-flight greetings even with free peanuts. Well, maybe on Jet Blue...
And if a live person gets locked in there? Like if the non-doctors make a mistake and they aren't really dead (As frequently happens in nursing homes)?
"Seems a reasonable solution to me.
Other options would be leaving her prone in an aisle ( evacuation hazard ) or maybe tossin her into bagage which seems wrong somehow.
The death was tragic and traumatic on those around her but BA can't change that."
I believe there is some extra space in the cockpit. That would reduce the passemger trauma.
It wasn't horrific for the woman but for the daughter and the other passengers to see. Perhaps the airlines should invest in a support that can be strapped to a body before belting it into its seat.
The flight crew did what was best under the circumstances given the few options they had. Space is often at a premium, so unless they sacrifice a closed area that can hold a body and perhaps a seat for a loved one who might prefer to stay with the deceased, it's unlikely that anything will change.
.. I was crew on sailboat deliveries NY - West Palm,Miami
Wilmington , NC was a fave stop , .. one time , there was a hearse parked near the Party Fishing boats , .. we found out later that night , .. a guy dropped dead when they had just reached their spot , way out
... so , not to ruin everyone else's day , they just put him below , on ice
.. they didn't stay out for the normal length of time , but they DIDn't turn right around , and head back
( on another note ) ,.. I always liked Wilmington , they had that 24hr fish market , at the docks , .. and that restaurant ,.. The Sanitary [??] ,.. or The Hygenic [??] ,.. I think the Hygenic was in New London , Ct ,.. but I digress ,.. sorry folks
Funny, I was just thinking . . . what if this had been on Jet Blue?
"The secret's in the sauce."
*Humbly apologizes for Fried Green Tomatoes quote..*
NASA's curve for temp. is 59- .00356Xaltitude (in feet), which gives about -69 F at 36000 ft. Makes sense, as the stratosphere is generally considered to start right around that altitude and the most common listed temperature for it is -70.
OMGoodness, I forgot about Aunt Edna! Now that's the way to go! LOL LOL LOL
Oh man, I hate that this happened and feel for the family, but "she's expired"! What was she, milk????
I believe "joined the choir invisible " is more tactful that "she expired"!
LOL
Thanks for plowing the road for me.......
Couldn't you just chuck 'em? I mean, at sea we used to cover them with a flag and play taps before turning the dear departed into fish food. Trust me, they didn't care."
Somehow, I don't think that you were in a PRESSUEIZED situation on a ship at sea level.
Besides, how could anyone just dispose of a body without the authorities doing an autopsy and the family being notified as th their wishes for the disposal of the dead person?
Couldn't you just chuck 'em? I mean, at sea we used to cover them with a flag and play taps before turning the dear departed into fish food. Trust me, they didn't care."
Somehow, I don't think that you were in a PRESSURIZED situation on a ship at sea level.
Besides, how could anyone just dispose of a body without the authorities doing an autopsy and the family being notified as th their wishes for the disposal of the dead person?
Couldn't you just chuck 'em? I mean, at sea we used to cover them with a flag and play taps before turning the dear departed into fish food. Trust me, they didn't care."
Somehow, I don't think that you were in a PRESSURIZED situation on a ship at sea level.
Besides, how could anyone just dispose of a body without the authorities doing an autopsy and the family being notified as th their wishes for the disposal of the dead person?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.