Saturday, June 27, 2015

Emergency response from an airline coffee spill





When I first read about the Gaisano family incident where a 10-year old daughter suffered from second degree burns on a Philippine Airlines flight from Bangkok to Manila, I remembered my own coffee spill experience that happened more than 10 years ago on a Northwest Airlines flight to Los Angeles, California. 

In my case, some people casually suggested that I sue the airline (in America, there were other incidents of coffee spills that won court cases) but I told them that as long as the airline managed the incident well, I was okay with that. 

I was then traveling with my husband and baby.  We even had to request for a bassinet that was temporarily attached to the wall, as we sat right in front of it.  After we ate our meal, I requested for coffee.  The Filipina flight attendant brought the very hot beverage and handed it to me.  As I was mixing the creamer and sugar, the beverage spilled on my lap.  I was locked to my seat table and could not immediately get out of my seat so I sustained second degree burns.  Instead of helping me out of my difficult position, the attendant left to get a dry rag.

I later discussed this incident with the Northwest Airlines manager who met me at the Los Angeles airport.  He agreed with me that there is a correct way in serving a hot beverage.  It should be served on a tray.  This wasn’t done in my situation.  Although the ultimate question on who or what caused the spill appears moot at this point, it is the airline’s emergency response that deserves notice.

More than the flight attendant who served the coffee, it was the purser who managed the situation better.  She even lent me her dress while we were drying my clothes.  Of course, I cannot forget what the airline did to ensure that I was taken care of, all the way to America.

Upon reaching the Narita International Airport in Japan, I was whisked to an airport clinic where the Japanese doctor applied a thick bandage on my wound.  He even suggested that I should convalesce for around a week in Japan.  Since the airline was rushing to get me to my connecting flight, the suggestion was not followed.

When we reached the tarmac of the Los Angeles International Airport, I was surprised to find paramedics at the scene in order to check on my wound.  When they saw that it was well bandaged and that I was functioning normally, they said that they wouldn’t care to touch it.  Instead the airline sent me to a clinic.

At the clinic, the doctor inspected the wound and gave lots of white cream that I was supposed to apply every day in order to heal the burn.  They provided all the medicines that I needed.  I followed the doctor’s advice and in a few weeks, my burns healed completely without any scars.


In this day and age when airline travel seems filled with nightmare scenarios, it is good to look back at a time when extraordinary situations were handled efficiently.  Hopefully, it will give ideas on how future incidents can also be addressed.