SINGAPORE: A doctor who tried to resuscitate a fellow passenger on board a Singapore Airlines flight but to no avail said on Friday (Nov 7) that he will not hesitate to step forward again if the same situation arises.
The incident happened on board SQ378, which was flying from Singapore to Milan on Wednesday.
Dr Desmond Wai, who was going to the Italian city for a holiday with his family, recalled trying to sleep after having a meal when the call for a doctor’s assistance was announced at around 2am (Singapore time).
“Being a doctor, it’s my ethical duty to help,” said Dr Wai, a gastroenterologist with a clinic at Mount Elizabeth Novena Specialist Centre.
At the back of the plane, he found a middle-aged man lying on the floor, and cabin crew with an automated external defibrillator (AED). A resuscitation trolley and medication had already been prepared.
Together with two other doctors, Dr Wai administered cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and used the AED in an effort to revive the man.
“As a doctor, we have done it many, many times,” said Dr Wai, adding that the cabin crew were well-trained.
“We are standardised when it comes to saving a patient,” the 56-year-old added.
Eventually, about half an hour later, the doctors and cabin crew stopped their attempts to resuscitate the man.
“We saw no progress and we advised the crew to stop,” said Dr Wai. “I’m sorry to say that we failed, but that’s life. Part of a doctor’s life is to be called and to help as much as we can,” he said.
When the plane landed in Milan, police officers met the doctors involved to ask questions about the incident.
“I was greeted by one policeman with a translator,” said Dr Wai. Many questions were asked, such as why he was there and what he was doing.
“Then, I started to worry,” Dr Wai added. “I asked myself, what if this is someone that the family doesn’t think should have died? What if the family or the police suspect foul play, he’s poisoned or murdered, and then I become part of the plot?”





