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Very sad, 60 is no age.I'd heard about her illness but it was quite a shock to hear she'd died.
If her heart attack hadn't occurred during the flight to the US, she might have recovered. Unfortunately, the defibrillator that all planes have on board, can't be used by the aircrew - only by trained medics/paramedics. I also understanbd that she has had mental health issues - but whether that played a part, I don't know.
What'e the point in carrying it then?I have used a defib and I have zero training.It's easy the machine tells you what to do, any idiot could use one.I did.
I suspect that it can't be used other than by a medic because of a fear of litigation. When one uses one as an ordinary member of the public - which I assume is what happened in your case, litigation is more difficult than when it involves the employee of a company on company 'property'.
And now another sad announcement - Debbie Reynolds has died too.
What litigation do you think the company would be subject to if somebody had a heart attack and all its employees just stood around watching them die because the company said it would fire them if they used the equipment that could save them?
Who knows, but I'm told by a past British Airways employee that that is the case.
Perhaps their information is out of date.Defibs are more common in public places now.They require no special training. You cannot shock someone as it decides whether to shock or not.