SINGAPORE – When Grace Tay’s mother went into cardiac arrest in Spain in 2025, Tay had to arrange for her parent to be medically evacuated and repatriated to Singapore.
A 63-year-old woman was on holiday in Barcelona, Spain, when she went into cardiac arrest in her hotel room.
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First responders took her to the hospital. Her husband and children called the medical evacuation hotline number that came with their insurance.
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None of the family spoke Spanish, so it was hard to coordinate with local doctors and the medical evacuation team to discuss the patient’s condition, and how evacuation could be arranged.
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To the financial adviser’s surprise, it took more than a week for the insurer’s appointed emergency medical evacuation team to arrange a suitable aircraft to reach her mother’s location and get the necessary flight permits.
The patient needed an air ambulance fitted to manage a person needing intensive care. It took four days for this to arrive. During this time, she remained in hospital.
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A commercial flight between Barcelona and Singapore takes from 13½ hours non-stop to at least 16 hours with a single layover. The aircraft used by Tay’s 63-year-old mother took close to three days to reach Singapore as it required refuelling and maintenance to deal with a technical fault.
During the evacuation, the 34-year-old and her family were added to a WhatsApp chat group with the medical evacuation team and the doctors in Singapore.
The air ambulance had to make several refuelling stops and needed maintenance, so the journey back to Singapore took longer than a commercial fight.
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They received updates on her mother’s condition during refuelling stops and had a tense few hours when engineers had to troubleshoot an issue with the left engine fuel pump.
“It was a traumatic experience,” recalls Tay. She is glad her parents had insurance that covered medical expenses overseas and the cost of repatriation.
On reaching Changi Airport, the patient and her husband were taken to a local public hospital via ambulance. The medical evacuation team handed over her care at the hospital.
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Demand for medical evacuation and repatriation to Singapore is steady, say hospitals, insurers and health and security risk services company International SOS.
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