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Severe turbulence that injured 17 people on a Delta flight is a stark reminder of why you need to wear your seatbelt

By: Pete Syme
17 December 2024 at 04:39
Delta Air Lines Airbus A350-900 passenger aircraft spotted flying on final approach for landing on the runway of Athens International Airport Eleftherios Venizelos at the Greek capital.
A Delta Air Lines Airbus A350.

Nicolas Economou/NurPhoto via Getty Images

  • A Delta flight encountered severe turbulence last year, with 17 people injured.
  • The NTSB's newly published report says none of the injured people were wearing seatbelts.
  • One passenger fractured four vertebrae and was hospitalized for over a month.

Newly released details from a 2023 incident that injured 17 airline passengers highlight the dangers of encountering turbulence, and serve as a stark reminder of why keeping your seatbelt on is always a good idea.

A Delta Air Lines Airbus A350 was flying from Milan to Atlanta when it encountered severe turbulence around 40 minutes from landing.

The National Transportation Safety Board made public its investigation last Friday. It found none of the injured people were wearing seatbelts despite the seatbelt sign being on.

10 of those who were injured were flight attendants, two of whom had serious injuries.

The flight's first officer told investigators that he told the cabin crew they should be seated due to expected turbulence. A list of injuries, shared with Delta and the NTSB, said the injured crew members weren't seated at the time.

One of those who was seriously injured suffered two broken ribs and back compression fractures, while the other had compression fractures in their neck and upper back, it said.

The other injuries to flight attendants included muscle strains, a concussion, and a deep cut that required stitches.

Five of the flight attendants were taken to hospital and released within 24 hours.

Of the seven passengers who were injured, one remained in hospital nearly a month after the flight. The person fractured four vertebrae and a rib, according to the NTSB report.

Another seriously injured passenger fractured one vertebra, while the others had muscle strains β€” mostly in the neck.

None of the injured passengers were wearing a seatbelt, the report said.

One of those passengers reported that her head hit the ceiling, hurting her neck, back, and head, although she was later able to walk off the plane.

Guy Gratton, an associate professor of aviation and the environment at Cranfield University, previously told Business Insider that a plane encountering turbulence is like "taking a box with something in it and starting to shake the box up and down."

"And clearly, if you're the person who's inside the box, then you get thrown around inside the box, and that's where injuries happen," he added.

"Passengers are told to keep their seatbelts done up because if you're tied to the box, you're much less likely to get injured."

While the Delta incident saw four serious injuries, cases of major injuries during turbulence are rare.

Between 2009 and 2023, 184 people were seriously injured by turbulence β€” an average of 12 a year β€”Β according to data from the Federal Aviation Administration. The majority of those, 146, were flight attendants rather than passengers.

Read the original article on Business Insider

A group of Frontier Airlines passengers are suing, saying they were kept on a 'smoke-filled' plane for nearly an hour

By: Pete Syme
28 November 2024 at 02:03
A Frontier Airlines Airbus A320-251N jet taxis at the single runway San Diego International Airport after arriving from Phoenix on January 13, 2024 in San Diego, California.
Frontier Airlines is being sued by 19 passengers.

Kevin Carter/Getty Images

  • Part of a Frontier Airlines plane caught fire upon landing in Las Vegas last month.
  • 19 passengers suing the airline say they were kept on a smoke-filled plane for nearly an hour.
  • The NTSB's report said firefighters told the pilots the smoke had been eliminated.

A group of Frontier Airlines passengers say they were kept on board a smoke-filled plane for nearly an hour in a lawsuit filed last week.

The 19 plaintiffs were among the 197 people on board Flight 1326 from San Diego to Las Vegas on October 5.

According to the National Transportation Safety Board's preliminary report into the incident, theΒ Airbus A321Β was arriving at Las Vegas' Harry Reid International Airport when it suffered a brake fire. Photos and video of the incident show smoke and flames coming from the aircraft.

The flight's first officer told investigators that, shortly before descent, the cabin crew detected an odor in the cabin, which was then smelled in the cockpit, too.

The report added that after the pilots declared an emergency, their display screens were limited, and they had some difficulty communicating with air traffic control.

Friday's lawsuit, filed in the Nevada District Court, says that the cabin was filled with smoke and became "extraordinarily hot."

It adds that passengers were also subjected to "the violent impact of the landing" after tires exploded and landing gear collapsed.

Emergency services came onto the runway to extinguish the fire.

The 190 passengers and seven crew were evacuated via the air stairs and took a bus to the terminal, a Frontier spokesperson previously told Business Insider. They added that nobody was injured.

The lawsuit says that before evacuating, passengers were "held on a sweltering smoke-filled aircraft for nearly an hour."

The NTSB's report said the pilots began the emergency evacuation checklist but firefighters told them the fire was extinguished and the smoke was eliminated.

Frontier Airlines did not immediately respond to a request for comment from BI about the lawsuit.

The plaintiffs accused the airline of negligence and asked for at least $15,000 in both general and special damages, plus lost wages and attorneys' fees.

NTSB and Federal Aviation Administration investigations into the incident are ongoing.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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