And now, a good news story.
Mrs Melrose, 70, was flying ex Brisbane to Auckland on an Air New Zealand flight with her husband John when a life and death drama unfolded.
Before the flight, Mrs Melrose spent six hours in hospital with stomach pains. Scans failed to reveal any problem and Mrs Melrose was given medicine and told she could fly home from a three-week holiday at Noosa. But 20 minutes into the flight, she began to feel "extremely uncomfortable" and was moved into business class where she could lie flat. "I went into respiratory arrest and then cardiac arrest," Mrs Melrose, of Bucklands Beach, told the Herald.We believe this deserves a ContraCelsum S-Award: to Dr Taylor and the two nurses and the airline crew: an S-Award, Class I for stellar service--remaining cool, calm, collected and professional in a grave emergency.
A call was made on the aircraft for a doctor and Dr Taylor and two nurses rushed to her aid. "When I got there, Mary was gasping for air," the Manukau GP said. "I started asking her husband about her health ... and then she just collapsed on me."
Using onboard equipment, the father-of-three performed CPR on Mrs Melrose for several minutes, fitted her with an oxygen mask and inserted a drip to administer drugs. "I told her husband she might not make it, that she was very poorly - but we gave it a go. After a while I looked up at the nurses and said 'She's gone', but then she started gurgling," said Dr Taylor.
Fearing Mrs Melrose would not survive the journey to Auckland, Dr Taylor asked for the plane to return to Brisbane. "There was great professionalism by Air New Zealand staff. They knew their stuff ... When the call came to turn around, they just said 'What you say goes' and made it happen." . . .
Back in Brisbane, Mrs Melrose was rushed by ambulance to the nearest hospital where she spent five days in intensive care and another recovering in a ward before she was cleared to come home. "It turned out there was a blockage somewhere in my gut and as a result of the gas build-up, everything swelled up as we left the ground," she said. "My stomach was slammed up into my diaphragm and everything was squashed. I couldn't breathe."
On Sunday, the couple went to Manukau City Accident & Medical, where Dr Taylor does a weekly shift, to thank him for saving Mrs Melrose's life on the August 29 flight. "We took him a bunch of flowers and some chocolate. He said I was definitely a goner - I was brought back from the dead. He was so pleased he had brought me back," Mrs Melrose said, describing her resuscitation as miraculous.
Five years ago she was diagnosed with terminal ovarian cancer, but after lengthy chemotherapy she is now in remission. "So the effort that was required [to resuscitate] was a lot. I am extremely lucky. God and his angels were definitely looking after me on that flight."
Dr Taylor was thrilled Mrs Melrose turned up to see him on Sunday. "She looked a million dollars - that's what I do this work for," he said. "I was flying all day, it was so lovely." . . . [NZ Herald]
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