denverpilot
Tied Down
Wait for it... LOL...
did soneone at least rinse it off before insertion? seriously, hope the recipient is ok.
yup..."your honor i call as my first witness...YouTube!"Would sure make for an interesting medical malpractice discovery process....
The floor is clean.did soneone at least rinse it off before insertion? seriously, hope the recipient is ok.
Man I'm not sure I'd want that heart... the luck the donor had sure sucks...
A) To be in a position such that they're donating their heart
B) Helicopter crash
C) Heart gets dropped
It might be safer to go without that person's luck...
Word is the heart was successfully transplanted 2 hours after the accident and the patient is recuperating. Maybe he should buy a lotto ticket?not think that someone might not receive that organ.
I would think that lack of sterility would be a problem. When I transported a kidney on a Civil Air Patrol flight, it was packaged in a sealed box, so dropping it would not have resulted in contamination.did soneone at least rinse it off before insertion? seriously, hope the recipient is ok.
I would think that lack of sterility would be a problem. When I transported a kidney on a Civil Air Patrol flight, it was packaged in a sealed box, so dropping it would not have resulted in contamination.
25 years ago I was flying from Charleston to Cincinnati. I didn't have my COVID beard, in fact, I looked and dressed more than respectably. We had had a good week fishing, and I had some frozen shark I was taking home. I had a tiny red-and-white cooler, with a blue nylon strap around it. I chucked it through the x-ray machine, and it looked like body parts. In fact, security asked if I even wanted it to go through! I told them it would be unharmed. I then sat down at the gate, and was immediately invited to get on the plane! I even got a better seat, near the door, than my ticket would have allowed.
People stared at me. I didn't know why until months later, when a doctor friend told me that they use those little cooler to transport hearts and kidneys.
I ate what was in my cooler.
25 years ago I was flying from Charleston to Cincinnati. I didn't have my COVID beard, in fact, I looked and dressed more than respectably. We had had a good week fishing, and I had some frozen shark I was taking home. I had a tiny red-and-white cooler, with a blue nylon strap around it. I chucked it through the x-ray machine, and it looked like body parts. In fact, security asked if I even wanted it to go through! I told them it would be unharmed. I then sat down at the gate, and was immediately invited to get on the plane! I even got a better seat, near the door, than my ticket would have allowed.
People stared at me. I didn't know why until months later, when a doctor friend told me that they use those little cooler to transport hearts and kidneys.
I ate what was in my cooler.
Saw a video of a doc recovering the package from the plane and walking across the roof and then tripped and fell and dropped the package. that heart wasn’t meant to be transplanted.