The child had been recovering from pneumonia and was travelling with family on the final leg from Dubai to Kochi. What began as unusual drowsiness quickly progressed to obvious breathing difficulty, and the cabin crew called for medical assistance.
Two other doctors were already supporting the child with oxygen when Dr Cecil arrived. As the senior doctor on site, he took the lead – and immediately faced the realities of treating a paediatric emergency at 30,000 feet. The aircraft’s pulse oximeter was adult sized, so he improvised to obtain a reading. The oxygen saturation was dangerously low.
Although oxygen was being administered, Dr Cecil suspected the onboard cylinder wasn’t delivering properly and requested a replacement tank. The child’s saturation improved after the change, but remained below safe levels. Soon after, the child began to seize – believed to be triggered by oxygen deprivation.
Dr Cecil focused on the essentials: keep the airway open, support breathing, and prevent further deterioration. When medication was offered to stop the seizures, he made a critical call not to administer it, concerned it could worsen the child’s breathing in an environment with limited respiratory support. Instead, he advised the crew that the child needed urgent hospital care – prompting the flight to divert and land in Mumbai.
The child was transferred to hospital on arrival, and the family later shared that hospital doctors confirmed the timely, precise decisions in the air were instrumental in saving their son.