On my flight back home from Sweden last week came that dreaded call: Is there a doctor on board?
And of course, I had my medical degree; only I hadn’t practiced for almost twenty years.
But that might have been more than the other passengers, so when I started hearing shouts and commotion behind two closed curtains, I decided it was time to rise to the occasion.
As I made my way back, the shouts got stronger, but I couldn’t discern the language or what was said.
Quite a few necks were craning and the fact that terrorism is on everyone’s mind made the calm in the cabin remarkable.
When I pulled back the curtains to the galley, I saw a half-naked man on the floor. Next to him stood a Thai stewardess and a Muslim woman. The woman with a headscarf told me she was a doctor too, and that the man was a diabetic. The airplane first aid kit was already unfolded next to him.
They had just checked his blood sugar and it was rock bottom.
So now the question was if the man who was flailing his naked arms and speaking gibberish simply had overdosed his insulin; if he was drunk, or if there was something else wrong.
He received a glucose injection, and didn’t markedly improve and it was virtually impossible to communicate with him. In his hand luggage we found his medication for a thyroid disorder.
Half an hour passed, his breathing and pulse was fine, skin tone great, and finally the sugar injection seemed to work. He became coherent, and started behaving like a fully reasonable person - an amazing transformation.
It reminded me of my last chopper rescue, back in 1984, when I gave a glucose injection to an unconscious young man, hoping he simply had hypoglycemia. That didn't work and that man never woke up again.
I wish I could take credit for the recovery of the man on the plane, but it was all thanks to the Malaysian doctor in a headscarf.
As for me, I was just happy that the crew hadn’t panicked and tried to make an emergency landing on Greenland, or that I had been the only doctor on board.
Sometimes it can be pretty scary to hear that call – is there a doctor on board?