snoop1130 Posted May 29, 2024 Posted May 29, 2024 Thailand has been praised for its efficient handling of an emergency involving a Singapore Airlines flight experiencing severe turbulence over Myanmar on May 21. Leading the team was Dr Wichanya Burirak, an aviation enthusiast and physician. The incident occurred when Singapore Airlines Flight SQ321, on its way from London to Singapore, encountered heavy turbulence. Reports of injured passengers and crew prompted the pilots to make an emergency landing in Bangkok at Suvarnabhumi Airport. Dr Wichanya, a graduate of Chiang Mai University’s Faculty of Medicine, described the scene at the airport as chaotic, with people rushing all over the place. There was little time to prepare as the airplane, carrying 229 passengers and crew, touched down 20 minutes earlier than expected at 3:51pm. The scale of the incident became evident when Dr Wichanya boarded the plane and saw the injured passengers, many of whom were seriously hurt. After taking stock of the situation, Dr Wichanya contacted Suvarnabhumi Airport’s director, Kittipong Kittikachorn, to implement a mass casualty plan. Following approval, she coordinated her medical team, paramedics from Samitivej Hospital, rescuers, and a transport team to assist the injured. The operation was swift. Injured passengers were rushed to Samitivej Srinakarin Hospital, located 19 kilometers away, in just 15 minutes – half of the typical travel time. The affected flight had passengers from 16 nations, with the most coming from Australia (56), the United Kingdom (47), and Singapore (41). As per Singapore Airlines, 40 passengers and one crew member are still receiving treatment in a Bangkok hospital. The injuries range from spinal, skull, and brain injuries, and sadly, there was also one fatality, 73-year-old Briton Geoff Kitchen. Dr Wichanya, who has spent 12 years working at Suvarnabhumi, said this was the largest incident she's dealt with. She expressed her childhood love for airplanes, even winning the title of True Fan of Airlines on a TV game show in 2005. Photo courtesy of The Thaiger -- 2024-05-29 Get our Daily Newsletter - Click HERE to subscribe 1 1
Popular Post Georgealbert Posted May 29, 2024 Popular Post Posted May 29, 2024 The pilot after becoming aware of the injuries used a transponder Squawk Code 7700, which indicates an emergency to ATC (Air Traffic Control). Once the plane had been stabilised the pilot informed ATC that it had a mass casualty emergency event and wished to divert to BKK, and required medical support to be on standby. The preliminary investigation reports states the turbulence event occur at 07:49:21 hr (UTC) and the aircraft touched down in Suvarnabhumi Airport at 08:45:12 (UTC) 15.45 BKK time. BKK Airport/AOT (Airports of Thailand) put into place their pre-determined emergency response plan, with RVP (Rendezvous Point) for responding agencies in the external car park, with AOT staff and escort vehicles meeting them, to convoy them airside, and a forward incident command post was set up at the airport fire station. Initial triage, lead by this doctor, started on the aircraft, but a full triage area was soon set up below the plane, as can be seen in the pictures with the colour coded tents, also in this link to the story of the doctor’s AOT 1 medical team, below. https://www.thaipbs.or.th/news/content/340270 A crisis command centre would also be set up in the airport terminal, with senior officers and officials, who would be liaising with the forward incident command post, hospitals, Singapore Airlines, Embassies and government agencies. This appears to be a well executed emergency/crisis response by BKK Airport and the ongoing crisis management by Singapore Airlines, seems to so far to have only one passenger distractor, who has has spoken to the media. 2 1 1 1
Tropicalevo Posted May 29, 2024 Posted May 29, 2024 12 minutes ago, Chris Daley said: He gets paid to do it. Clue in the word doctor. Who is 'he'? 2
Georgealbert Posted May 29, 2024 Posted May 29, 2024 20 minutes ago, Chris Daley said: He gets paid to do it. Clue in the word doctor. Please tell us your emergency response experience, and how you would manage a mass casualty event, instead of posting your normal nonsense from your behind the keyboard! 2 1
Popular Post dinsdale Posted May 29, 2024 Popular Post Posted May 29, 2024 An impotant and positive story. Pity the accompanying headline is rubbish. Nothing brave happening here just an effective response of which she (if the pic is actually the doc mentioned, never know on this forum) led the medical team on site. Seems like the emergency response system they have in place worked well. Edit: I checked and the image is Dr Wichanya Burirak. 1 5
ukrules Posted May 29, 2024 Posted May 29, 2024 I saw part of this happen while on my way to Phnom Penh last week. Sitting there waiting for my delayed flight I first heard the sirens - lots of them. When we got onto the 'shuttle bus' that took us to the plane an hour or two later (was early + a delay) we drove right past a load of parked up ambulances, they all had their lights flashing which was odd. I didn't give it a second thought at the time but I guess they were real busy working this situation. Didn't notice if they were next to a plane or somewhere else, it was a little odd to see so many ambulances 'in action' on the aircraft side of the airport though. When I read about this incident a little later after checking into my hotel it made more sense.
Georgealbert Posted May 29, 2024 Posted May 29, 2024 5 hours ago, ukrules said: I saw part of this happen while on my way to Phnom Penh last week. Sitting there waiting for my delayed flight I first heard the sirens - lots of them. When we got onto the 'shuttle bus' that took us to the plane an hour or two later (was early + a delay) we drove right past a load of parked up ambulances, they all had their lights flashing which was odd. I didn't give it a second thought at the time but I guess they were real busy working this situation. Didn't notice if they were next to a plane or somewhere else, it was a little odd to see so many ambulances 'in action' on the aircraft side of the airport though. When I read about this incident a little later after checking into my hotel it made more sense. In Thailand responders do like to use their vehicle emergency lights all the time, as you would normally expect at an emergency incident scene only the command/lead vehicle keeps it flashing lights on, with all the others turned off, unless the vehicles are parked in a dangerous position, such as on a roadway. Airport rules require glashing lights are used always. ICAO (International Civil Aviation Organisation) Annex 14, airport standards, says that all vehicle airside must display flashing warning lights, with emergency or security vehicles it will be flashing blue and those displayed on other vehicles shall be flashing yellow.
hotchilli Posted May 29, 2024 Posted May 29, 2024 Sounds like the airport had an "emergency accident" plan in place and as it was needed that day it was put into action and well executed. All international and regional airports have to have this "crisis management plan" in case of emergencies such as this. The airport crisis team manage the initial response an liaise with outside emergency services as needed.
Popular Post Classic Ray Posted May 29, 2024 Popular Post Posted May 29, 2024 Why brave? She was in no danger. She was undoubtedly praiseworthy and competent but reserve commendations for bravery for those who perform brave acts. 3
mrmicbkktxl Posted May 30, 2024 Posted May 30, 2024 Lucky for the passengers Singapore Air will pay for hospital costs if not some passengers probably would end up on the streets or in a government hospital if can't show credit card,cash or insurance, just a thought 1
Popular Post simon43 Posted May 30, 2024 Popular Post Posted May 30, 2024 'Brave' doctor is simply not appropriate English to describe this doctor. (AI obviously needs to improve..). "Efficient doctor" or "Competent doctor" might be more appropriate. 1 2
Georgealbert Posted May 30, 2024 Posted May 30, 2024 2 hours ago, hotchilli said: Sounds like the airport had an "emergency accident" plan in place and as it was needed that day it was put into action and well executed. All international and regional airports have to have this "crisis management plan" in case of emergencies such as this. The airport crisis team manage the initial response an liaise with outside emergency services as needed. Fully agree with your statement, but please let me be boring and correct some terminology. All airports will have an emergency response and contingency plan, which will follow ICAO (International Civil Aviation Organisation) guidance and is the pre-determined plan for any incident, accident or occurrence, and hopefully covers all possible eventualities. That plan will be practised regularly and updated/amended as necessary. The emergency response and contingency plan covers preparedness, mitigation, response, and recovery from any event, with a focus on saving lives and preserving property, and is split into 2 levels, operational and tactical. This doctor lead the operational response at the aircraft, but would report to an Incident Commander, in charge of the tactical needs of the incident, dealing with all operations, logistics, planning, reporting/recording systems, To support the Incident Commander a forward command post and team was set up at the airport fire station. The airport will also have a crisis management plan, and team, which will be removed away from the incident response and concentrates on a proactive strategic approach, covering crisis communications, media releases, stakeholder management (Singapore Airlines and government agencies), ensure continued business operations/return to normality with minimum disruption, protecting the airport’s reputation and maintaining business confidence. A standard 3 tier response, which is reported to have worked very well. 1
hotchilli Posted May 30, 2024 Posted May 30, 2024 2 hours ago, Georgealbert said: Fully agree with your statement, but please let me be boring and correct some terminology. All airports will have an emergency response and contingency plan, which will follow ICAO (International Civil Aviation Organisation) guidance and is the pre-determined plan for any incident, accident or occurrence, and hopefully covers all possible eventualities. That plan will be practised regularly and updated/amended as necessary. The emergency response and contingency plan covers preparedness, mitigation, response, and recovery from any event, with a focus on saving lives and preserving property, and is split into 2 levels, operational and tactical. This doctor lead the operational response at the aircraft, but would report to an Incident Commander, in charge of the tactical needs of the incident, dealing with all operations, logistics, planning, reporting/recording systems, To support the Incident Commander a forward command post and team was set up at the airport fire station. The airport will also have a crisis management plan, and team, which will be removed away from the incident response and concentrates on a proactive strategic approach, covering crisis communications, media releases, stakeholder management (Singapore Airlines and government agencies), ensure continued business operations/return to normality with minimum disruption, protecting the airport’s reputation and maintaining business confidence. A standard 3 tier response, which is reported to have worked very well. Thank you for the full version of what I said. 1
PETERTHEEATER Posted May 30, 2024 Posted May 30, 2024 18 hours ago, Chris Daley said: He gets paid to do it. Clue in the word doctor. He is a she. 1
cowellandrew Posted May 30, 2024 Posted May 30, 2024 21 hours ago, Georgealbert said: Please tell us your emergency response experience, and how you would manage a mass casualty event, instead of posting your normal nonsense from your behind the keyboard! Behind the keyboard would probably be under the desk! ☻😁 1
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now