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Girl, 16, kicked off plane for coughing

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  • Girl, 16, kicked off plane for coughing

    HONOLULU - A 16-year-old girl who caught a cold during a school trip to New York was kicked off her flight home because she was coughing.

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    Rachel Collier was removed from the Continental Airlines plane as it was about to leave Newark, N.J., for Honolulu earlier this week. She had fallen asleep after boarding the plane with about three dozen classmates and woke up coughing and gasping for breath as it was about to take off.

    "Everyone was looking at me," she said. "I couldn't talk because I lost my voice coughing so much. I was panicking."

    The flight attendants gave her water, and a doctor on the flight said she would be OK to make the 10-hour flight. But the captain returned the aircraft to the gate to drop off the girl and one of her teachers.

    Rachel said she started crying when the captain told her to leave. She and the teacher finally made it home the next day.

    Teacher Maile Kawamura, a chaperone for the spring break trip to New York and Washington, D.C., said she was shocked. The two didn't know what to do or where to stay, she said. They finally found accommodations in New York and bought clothes and toiletries.

    Continental said in a statement that Collier was coughing "uncontrollably" on the plane Tuesday and that "the captain felt he was acting in the best interest of the passenger and other passengers on the flight."

    Rachel's mother, Stephanie Collier, said Continental has agreed to reimburse her daughter's expenses incurred during the extra day, including the cost of the hotel.

    "I felt it was really extreme for a coughing fit," she said. "We've all had coughing fits."
    What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
    Faust

  • #2
    Yikes, my DS has a cough left over and we're flying tomorrow. I was planning to "medicine him up" anyway, it better work!

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    • #3
      That really seems a bit extreme. I can't believe the airline didn't even give them further direction or help, considering they had their luggage and all. Might it have taken less time to let the plane sit for a couple minutes and have her get the cough under control?


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      • #4
        It sounds to me like more than an ordinary coughing fit. Maybe she has asthma and there was concern that she would have an attack when they were in the air and out of the reach of help.

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        • #5
          Quite possible, but with the Dr on board giving the OK, I would think it wasn't. But then, I know a few Drs I wouldn't trust, so maybe not.

          Still seems like the airline should have given more direction and help to them after kicking them off without their luggage.


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          • #6
            The "gasping for breath" bit is what made me think it might be more than simple coughing.

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            • #7
              The captain is responsible for the health and safety of everybody on board - not a doctor who just happened to be travelling on the same flight. If the girl had collapsed during the flight, and effective medical attention wasn't available, the pilot would be the one in trouble, not the doctor.
              I think he did the right thing in offloading the girl and an adult to look after her. Where things went badly wrong was in their support after the event by ground staff.

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              • #8
                Originally posted by Keitht
                The captain is responsible for the health and safety of everybody on board - not a doctor who just happened to be travelling on the same flight. If the girl had collapsed during the flight, and effective medical attention wasn't available, the pilot would be the one in trouble, not the doctor.
                I think he did the right thing in offloading the girl and an adult to look after her. Where things went badly wrong was in their support after the event by ground staff.

                I agree. It would have been an entirely different headline if the pilot had left the girl on the plane, she had some sort of attack while in flight and died. Then we'd all have been saying, "What was the pilot thinking? Continental was just worried about it's on time record and not the health of this child. We should boycott them for being an uncaring callouse business."

                While it could have gone either way the pilot did the right thing to error on the side of caution when a life may have been at stake. While I wouldn't have wanted it to happen to me I could have understood why it happened. Continental has apparently stepped up to the plate and paid many if not all of the additional incured expenses for the girl and her chapperone despite illness not being something they're responsible for.

                Out of curiosity, why does it say ADVERTISEMENT just above the article?
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                • #9
                  Originally posted by dougp26364

                  Out of curiosity, why does it say ADVERTISEMENT just above the article?
                  Sometimes when you cut and paste from CNN.com or another news site, you accidentally pick up a little piece of the advertising banners. I think that's what happened here. The article isn't the advertisement, there was a real advertisement just above the article.

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Keitht
                    The captain is responsible for the health and safety of everybody on board - not a doctor who just happened to be traveling on the same flight. If the girl had collapsed during the flight, and effective medical attention wasn't available, the pilot would be the one in trouble, not the doctor.
                    I think he did the right thing in offloading the girl and an adult to look after her. Where things went badly wrong was in their support after the event by ground staff.
                    You remind me of a person I dealt with several years ago in business discussions. As everyone else was screaming "the sky is falling", John would just listen to everyone, and then softly begin speaking. Everyone would just shut up and listen, because when he spoke, what he said usually put a good perspective on the situation.

                    Thanks for the common sense comments!
                    Give me a place with 4 S's: Sun, sand, surf, & suds-Dale (from Illinois)

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by zdxlc9p6
                      Thanks for the common sense comments!
                      You are much too kind My line manager in my previous job accused me of being negative because I would identify and raise concerns about the possible risks in some of his hair brained schemes. Personally, I'd rather somebody say to me "Have you thought of the consequences if....." than come to me after the event and say "I thought that might happen but I didn't like to say anything."

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