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If you value your childs safety do not fly with Easyjet

138 replies

C09 · 11/10/2010 10:04

I would like to my family's recent Easyjet experience with our 4 year old daughter

Flight delayed by 3 hours with no information (No surprise there)

Boarded the plane.

After further delays my four year old daughter decided she needed to use the toilet. (no surprise there either)

The plane door was a swing door, not the type you push in the middle.

My daughter trapped her ring finger in the toilet door as I attempted to close it. This resulted in a crushed finger and a severe cut with copious bleeding.

The attendants response was to place ice on the cut and dip it into a glass of iced water.

I asked if I needed to get off the flight and received no guidance. The reply was, "Its up to you!"

My wife dressed the wound and we decided to continue to London.
The female attendant asked if we wanted an ambulance on arrival. We said yes.

The captain radioed onward.

She returned with a paper message reply from London asking for my daughters name, age, allergies, medication etc.

I supplied this information which I assumed was forwarded.

My daughter had calmed and the bleeding stopped. The attendant asked if we still needed an ambulance and mentioned something about possible diversion of the flight if this was still the case.

As things had calmed I said that a doctor or paramedic would suffice at the gate upon arrival as my child (A 4 year old girl) still had a bad wound.

We landed, we had to wait for all the passengers to disembark. No attempt was made to accommodate us getting off the plane first.

Before disembarking, a male pilot, possibly the captain came to speak to us, when I mentioned the medical staff that was awaiting us he remained mute (I now know why)

We disembarked, put on the bus for an epic journey to the gate where no-one was waiting.

We continued through the terminal and were fast tracked through by passport control.
My wife continued into the terminal where a first aider assisted.
We visited the Easyjet help desk where after a call to operations it was revealed that a call had gone out from the jet to London that no assistance was required. How on earth was this decision made!(This conversation was recorded)

We were then told by the desk that they were getting a paramedic to see us, it was then revealed there are no paramedics onsite and they were sending another first aider.

To summarise, my child was injured on an easyjet flight, the first aid on the flight consisted of ice cubes, we were promised medical assistance on arrival and then a decision was made on that flight to cancel this assistance without our knowledge or agreement. We found ourselves wandering through Gatwick with an injured 4 year old girl.

OP posts:
kreecherlivesupstairs · 11/10/2010 10:18

You get what you pay for. It seems from your post that you injured your DD by trapping her finger.
It was an accident and to expect a team of paramedics or a doctor at the gates seems a bit much to me.
Sorry if this seems harsh, but they are a budget airline.

ColdComfortFarm · 11/10/2010 10:20

Um, so you shut your daughter's finger in the door and it's Easyjet's fault? How bad was her injury anyway if it stopped bleeding so quickly? I hope she is better. Most of us have accidentally hurt our kids at some point and it is horrible, but you can't really blame anyone else for it!

sooz28 · 11/10/2010 10:23

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Unwind · 11/10/2010 10:26

I hope she's okay. But I don't understand why you did not get off the flight if the injury was so bad that you wanted an ambulance to be waiting on arrival.

Surely, if paramedics were needed, it would have been quicker to get them to the airport you were leaving from?

Haliborange · 11/10/2010 10:26

I would never fly crappy jet.

There are medical people in the airport and presumably one could be found when you arrived if necessary (or indeed at the one you were at when the accident happened).

Did your DD need to be stretchered off the plane? Did her finger need surgery? Did your daughter's health suffer as a result of there not being a medical team at the gate? If not, might you be over-egging the pudding? I mean, if it had really been that bad wouldn't you have got off the plane and flown later? Why did you decide to stay on the plane?

expatinscotland · 11/10/2010 10:28

You could have gotten off the plane if she were that badly injured.

Instead, you didn't want to lose the money you'd spent on tickets and continued on the journey, expecting expensive medical services to be waiting for you on arrival.

How badly injured can a person be if they're able to carry on with the flight?

TheUnmentioned · 11/10/2010 10:29

If you had time to go to the esayjet help desk and complain and it was no longer bleeding it seems ott that you needed a paramedic.

i hope your daughter is ok now.

usernamechanged345 · 11/10/2010 10:30

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

ColdComfortFarm · 11/10/2010 10:30

I think an injury cannot simultaneously be trivial enough to get on a plane and fly to London with with just a plaster or bit of bandage and no medical assistance, yet also serious enough to require an ambulance on arrival.

giddly · 11/10/2010 10:31

Yes of course crush injuries can be severe, but in that case would you want your child to continue the flight in that state when she had the chance to get off?

expatinscotland · 11/10/2010 10:31

If she were that badly injured he seems rather cruel to have not deplaned with the kid then, mrsp.

Bucharest · 11/10/2010 10:32

What ColdComfort said.

TheUnmentioned · 11/10/2010 10:33

Yes mrspickles but they decided to wait for medical assistance until they had got to their destination - if your child was that injured you wouldnt wait would you? If they were screaming in pain or still bleeding etc? Youd be a very irresponsible parent if you saw your child going through that and then carried on with your flight presumably for convenience / financial reasons would you not?

ConnorTraceptive · 11/10/2010 10:34

Get a grip if she was well enough to fly in your opinion then she certainly didn't need a paramedic at the other end. Not much a paremedic can do with a possibe broken finger anyway.

Hardly the airlines fault if you shut the door on your child's finger!

That said hope she is fine now poor thing

Unwind · 11/10/2010 10:36

I've had severe crush injuries to my fingers that did require (minor) surgery - when it happened it was serious, but not urgent. I did not need an ambulance or any paramedic involvement. I was low priority in a&e, and waited hours to be seen.

ColdComfortFarm · 11/10/2010 10:37

I think the OP wants to blame Easyjet for having the wrong sort of loo doors, not himself for shutting the door on his daughter's finger. Hmm. Do airports normally have doctors on site?

SoupDragon · 11/10/2010 10:38

Why has no one pointed out the shocking lack of an apostrophe in the title? Shock

gorionine · 11/10/2010 10:39

I am really sorry your Dd got hurt but I have to agree with the majority.

MrsPickels I agree the way the accident was delt woith was bad but IMHO there are wrongs on both sides; if one of my Dcs had injured themeleves and I thought it was really bad and the flight had not yet took off I would have gone out of it and seeked medical assistance there and then. I think if OP was really that worried, he would have done the same.

Unwind · 11/10/2010 10:39

rereading my post - obviously my injury was not that "severe"

SoupDragon · 11/10/2010 10:41

I hate these posts where the poster puts the same thing on several message boards which they don't regularly use.

gorionine · 11/10/2010 10:42

"Why has no one pointed out the shocking lack of an apostrophe in the title? Shock"

Because this is "AIBU", not "pedant's corner" Wink

What do you mean SoupDragon?

ProfessorLaytonIsMyLoveSlave · 11/10/2010 10:47

Either the injury was severe enough to need urgent medical attention or it wasn't. If it was then you'd have attended hospital immediately; if it wasn't then you didn't need an ambulance waiting for you at Gatwick.

Unwind · 11/10/2010 10:47

he is angry and unwilling to take responsibility - he closed a door on his own child's finger, he choose to fly to London anyway, he choose to go to the easyjet helpdesk rather than making their way straight to the nearest A&E

It must genuinely have been very upsetting for all involved

Laquitar · 11/10/2010 10:50

I was scared to click on this thread as i use Easy Jet often. I was expecting something worst when i read the title.

Ok i am relieved now Grin. Sorry OP.

SoupDragon · 11/10/2010 10:51

And then, after his flight (on 16th Sept), I imagine he tried to get compensation out of Easyjet, failed and decided to post his story in a few place online.