Meet the Other Phone. Protection built in.

Meet the Other Phone.
Protection built in.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Holidays

Use our Travel forum for recommendations on everything from day trips to the best family-friendly holiday destinations.

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:
DanceInTheDark · 11/10/2010 19:30

yes the collective response that said "you are a numpty" really means that we are all members of the school yard clique.

MadameCastafiore · 11/10/2010 19:33

FFS - did he expect Jeff and the blonde lesbian off of casualty to come rushing to the airport for a cut finger???

Probably the kind of man that would phone for an ambulance for a cut finger, broken or not broken she is not going to die FFS and raise it above her head it will stop the bleeding - any dope would know that!

Really it was not Easyjets fault at all was it????

PictureThis · 11/10/2010 19:34

colditz Anyfucker GrinGrin

shimmerysilverghosty · 11/10/2010 19:36

Sheesh I clicked onto this thread expecting to hear some kid had been nearly sucked down the toilet and out of the aircraft at the very least! How very dull.

Fwiw I always fly with easy jet, have never been delayed and they always let families with little kids on first.

Bet it's a barrel of laughs being your wife op.

Katz · 11/10/2010 19:42

You seriously wanted an ambulance to meet the plane for a squashed finger? In my experience, when the cabincrew truely believe that an ambulance is required they phone ahead, that was certainly my experince and they also wouldn't take no for an answer. I didn't think i needed one but the crew were insistant, and i was met at the plane door and put straight onto an ambulance on the tarmac without entering the terminal building, i stress i really felt this was unnecessary but when they decide they decide. I'd hazard a guess that the cabincrew thought, its a squashed finger - AND?

JiggeryPopery · 11/10/2010 19:49

If I were about to drop dead of a heart attack, and was told 'sorry, it was a toss up for the ambulance - you, near death and in need, or a child with a slightly squashed finger (not so badly damaged as to prevent flying) - and we went with the kid' I'd be pretty hacked off. And then dead.

I wonder if the call did actually come through but someone sensible had it wiped off the system so as not to waste NHS money.

lol at shimmery 's barrel of laughs comment

Olihan · 11/10/2010 20:04

My cousin developed a blood clot on her lung whilst on an EasyJet flight back from her honeymoon. She's a nurse and her DH is a police officer so they both know it was serious.

The cabin crew were incredibly helpful, the flight crew radioed for advice on whether to divert (the original airport was as close as any by that point so they didn't). There was an ambulance which was waiting on the tarmac for them as they landed. The rest of the flight was made to wait on board while my cousin was stabilised and stretchered off the plane into the ambulance. She was blue lighted to hospital and nearly died. Thanks to the EasyJet staff and the procedures put in place for an emergency situation by the airports she didn't.

A cut finger that isn't bad enough to stay in your departure airport for treatment and isn't bleeding by the time you were airborne is NOT in any rational person's mind an 'emergency', never mind an emergency requiring an ambulance.

If there is a genuine emergency EasyJet crew can not be faulted. IMO, they saw you as the over-reacting hysteric you are and left you to it. Correctly so.

HeadlessLadyBiscuit · 11/10/2010 20:30

I do wish the OP were still reading this thread but I doubt he is :(

:o Colditz and AF

Can we put this in Classics yet?

MissDolittle · 11/10/2010 20:47

Dear OP

Crush injuries are horrid and you must have been very stressed in the circumstances. However ambulances are for sick people, not minor injuries. When they asked you if you still wanted an ambulance and you said no, you wanted a Dr or paramedic at the gate they probably thought you were joking, because they were calm and rational and on the outside, but you were being serious because you were disorientated and guilt laden and on the inside.

I hope you dd is better and your misdirected rage doesn't cause your wife to doubt her ability to judge a safe pair of hands with whom to share her life with.

EastJet haven't done anything wrong except a bit of minor miscommunication. They should have told you to take her to hospital yourself rather then let you continue to think that airlines provide free taxis with flashing lights or the equivalent of a home visit for poorly fingers. I suggest you move on.

HTH

MissDolittle · 11/10/2010 20:49

Also, your child wasn't 'unsafe', she was sore and no amount of ambulances, paramedics or doctors would have stopped that.

SkylineDrifter · 11/10/2010 20:55

Oh HeadlessLadyB, I am pretty sure he'll still be reading it.
lol @ ScaryFucker - yes it reminded me of Gyno-man too!

SoupDragon · 11/10/2010 21:54

He got very little sympathy here either. But that was more like a single asp rather than a nest of vipers so he clearly hasn't felt the need to revisit it.

That or his wife has confiscated his laptop

ScaryFucker · 11/10/2010 22:01

am loving the reply on that link

SoupDragon · 11/10/2010 22:04

I wonder why he limited imself to posting it in two places? Do you think we scared him off?

ScaryFucker · 11/10/2010 22:07

I am more scared of him than he is of us

I mean , this guy traps children's fingers in doors, for fun

seriously baaad

Drayford · 12/10/2010 00:22

Blimey!! Over reaction maybe OP!

I'm not a big fan of the airline, but I was on an EJ flight last year when a chap in the row in front of me had a serious asthma attack and stopped breathing, I've never seen cabin crew act so fast - they were terrific and got the guy breathing again using adrenalin (that I gather was carried by him) and oxygen. We diverted to the nearest airport and the poor guy was offloaded by paramedics (in France) and we had to wait while his checked bags were identified.

I was horrified by the reaction of other passengers - very hostile! It was just a 30 minute delay and the chap was obviously in need of urgent medical attention.

If we'd had to divert for a trapped finger however, I think I would have been very pissed off!

This sounds to me like a case of anxious (Ok maybe understandably) parents and miscommunication with and by easyjet.

OP - If your DD is fine now, what's the beef?

Nefret · 12/10/2010 10:57

I suspect that the OP would have been one of those hostile passengers had he been on that flight Wink

you would be amazed at what people demand medical attention for though. I work in a nursing home and we have had people demanding to see the doctor for a broken toe nail before now - crazy!

DadInsteadofMum · 12/10/2010 18:08

OP as a man who wanders around mumsnet from time to time, may I offer some advice:

Don't use inflammatory, inaccurate and probably libellous thread titles

I come on here to offer and receive constructive advice, which I invariably do, if I were to make a tit of myslef receive views that contradicted my own (as I have) I would either take them on board or enter into reasoned argument.

I don't have a wife so can't comment on whether or not I would be too embarrassed to show her the responses and then claim I wasn't showing her for her own good.

You will receive a variety of views on here because a variety of people come on here, however when the overwhelming consensus says you are a bit of a tit wrong then you probably are a bit of a tit wrong.

ScaryFucker · 12/10/2010 19:24
Grin

or a bit of a troll

StayingDavidTennantsGirl · 12/10/2010 23:46
Grin

or a bit of a troll's tit, perhaps?

YummmyMummy · 07/11/2010 18:55

I'm glad I'm not the only one who thinks this is kind of your fault. Why did you continue with the flight if your daughter was apparently so injured she needed an ambulance on arrival? All seems a bit fishy to me!

darleneconnor · 07/11/2010 19:21

He should be thanking sleazyjet for not phoning ahead to the local SS. I bet he would have enjoyed being met off the plane by a Social Worker and Police Officier ready to interrogate him on his daughter's injury.

catinthehat2 · 07/11/2010 19:29
tefal · 10/11/2010 07:44

I missed it in October! What a thread.

Bucharest · 10/11/2010 07:46

Grin I thought it had been bumped because it had gone into MN classics.

Which is what it is.

Or because Easyjet had sued the OP for libel.

Which they should.