Several injured on Air Singapore flight need spinal surgery, hospital says

BANGKOK .- Many of the most seriously injured aboard the Singapore Airlines flight that encountered severe turbulence require spinal surgery, a Bangkok hospital said Thursday.

Twenty people remained in intensive care and a 73-year-old British man died after the Boeing 777, traveling from London Heathrow Airport to Singapore, descended sharply after encountering turbulence over the Andaman Sea on Tuesday.

A public relations official at the Samitivej Srinakarin hospital, which has treated more than 100 people injured in the incident, told The Associated Press that other local hospitals have been asked to provide their best specialists to assist in treatment. He asked not to be identified in accordance with hospital policy.

Passengers have described the “terror” of experiencing the aircraft shaking, loose objects flying, and injured people paralyzed on the floor of the plane.

It remained unclear what exactly caused the turbulence that caused the plane, carrying 211 passengers and 18 crew, to descend about 1,800 meters (6,000 feet) in about three minutes. The flight from London to Singapore was diverted to Thailand.

In one of the most recent descriptions of the scenes of chaos on board, Malaysian passenger Amelia Lim, 43, explained how she had found herself face down on the floor.

“I was very afraid (…) I saw a lot of people on the ground, everyone was bleeding. There was blood on the ground and on the people,” he told the online newspaper Malay Mail.

The woman who had been sitting next to him, he said, was “motionless in the hallway and unable to move, probably with a hip or spinal injury,” he said.

Authorities said the deceased Briton may have suffered a heart attack. Passengers have described how plane staff tried to revive him for about 20 minutes.

Most people associate turbulence with strong storms, but the most dangerous type is so-called clear air turbulence. Wind shear can occur in cirrus clouds or even in clear air near storms, as differences in temperature and pressure create powerful, fast-moving air currents.

Source: With information from AP

Tarun Kumar

I'm Tarun Kumar, and I'm passionate about writing engaging content for businesses. I specialize in topics like news, showbiz, technology, travel, food and more.

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