California Rep. Resuscitates Unconscious Airline Passenger

An American Airlines flight makes an emergency landing due to a passenger in distress

Wall Street closed out a volatile week with losses Friday as investors worried that upcoming trade talks aimed at resolving the costly trade war between Washington and Beijing could be in trouble. The selling, which erased modest early gains for the market, snapped a three-week win streak for the S&P 500. The benchmark index is still up 2.2% for September. The afternoon market slide came as investors reacted to published reports indicating Chinese officials canceled a planned trip to farms in Montana and Nebraska and would be returning to China. Representatives from the U.S. and China were engaging in preliminary discussions over the next two weeks to lay the groundwork for more formal negotiations next month.

Two United States congressmen, one from Texas and another from California, helped revive a passenger who passed out on a flight from Washington, D.C. to Dallas-Fort Worth on Thursday.

On the way to DFW International Airport, the pilot made an emergency landing in Raleigh due to the passenger in distress.

Meanwhile, in the cabin, Rep. Raul Ruiz (D-Calif.), a trained ER doctor, jumped into action during the flight. He provided the male passenger oxygen, checked his vital signs and even put on an defibrillator. Congressman Pete Gallego (D-Texas), out of San Antonio, also assisted in the resuscitation.

Ruiz estimated the passenger to be in his mid-60s.

"I'm an emergency medicine physician by heart, and my spirit felt alive, I was in my element. I was providing emergency care to somebody who needed it at the time and it felt real good," Ruiz told NBC 5 DFW after the plane landed in Dallas.

After landing, Gallego tweeted the following:

Local

Get Los Angeles's latest local news on crime, entertainment, weather, schools, COVID, cost of living and more. Here's your go-to source for today's LA news.

Two shootings within two miles from each other in Long Beach leave at least one person dead

Oilers rout Kings 6-1 in LA to take 2-1 series lead

Paramedics escorted that passenger off the plane in Raleigh and rushed him to an area hospital. He was alert and talking with paramedics by the time the plane landed. His name and an updated condition weren't available.

Ruiz told NBC 5 this isn't the first time this has happened. He said he's been able to help save a handful of other passengers who've passed out on flights home from D.C.

Exit mobile version