Lesson 1Cabin height body effects and low-oxygen air: impacts on oxygen levels, heart issues, and symptom limitsThis lesson describes cabin height body processes and low-oxygen air, including usual cabin pressures, effects on oxygen levels and heart load, symptom limits in fit and at-risk passengers, and treatment meanings.
Usual cabin pressure and height matchGas rules for aircraft cabinEffects on oxygen levels and breathlessnessHeart strain and low-blood-flow risksAt-risk groups and symptom limitsMeanings for oxygen and diversion choicesLesson 2Oxygen treatment adjustment, fluid revival basics in cabin, and safe medicine use (aspirin, nitrates, lung openers, muscle adrenaline) with flying limitsThis lesson details oxygen adjustment at cabin height, fluid revival with few supplies, and safe key drug use, including no-go uses, doses, ways to give, and flying safety rules for keeping, marking, and noting.
Oxygen giving tools and flow ratesAdjusting oxygen level goals in low-oxygen airFluid revival with limited itemsSafe aspirin and nitrate use in flightLung openers and breathing methodsMuscle adrenaline: dose and cautionsLesson 3Onboard tools and medicines available: usual first-aid set, emergency kit items, oxygen systems, heart shock device, and limitsThis lesson outlines standard onboard health supplies, including first-aid and emergency kits, oxygen setups, heart shock device uses, and main limits, noting differences between airlines and meanings for health choices.
Rule minimum first-aid kit itemsEmergency kit drugs and toolsPortable and fixed oxygen typesHeart shock device works, guides, and safe useTool differences between airlinesPlanning care around tool limitsLesson 4Common in-flight heart-lung emergencies and difference checks for sudden breathlessness and low pressure (heart events, lung clots, lung collapse, severe allergy, heart rhythm issues, fainting, low volume)This lesson reviews common in-flight heart-lung emergencies, stressing pattern spotting and difference checks for sudden breathlessness and low pressure, separating heart events, lung clots, lung collapse, severe allergy, heart rhythms, fainting, and low volume.
Spotting life-endangering breathlessness patternsSeparating heart events from lung clotsSpotting tight lung collapse in cabinSevere allergy versus lone airway tighteningHeart rhythms, fainting, and low pressureLow volume and hidden blood loss in flightLesson 5Rules and steps for diversion choices: health limits, flight stage, time to good diversion airport, passenger steadiness, and operations/legal thoughtsThis lesson explains health and operations rules for diversion, including unsteadiness limits, treatment response, flight stage, diversion airport fit, legal duties, and joint choices with captain and ground help.
Health warnings needing diversionTime-urgent versus time-okay conditionsChecking time to good diversion airportSharing risks with flight teamLegal and blame aspects of diversionNoting the diversion choice stepsLesson 6Quick handling steps for suspected heart events, lung clots, severe allergy, and heart or low-volume shock in flightThis lesson gives step-by-step steps for handling suspected heart events, lung clots, severe allergy, and shock in flight, adjusting standard emergency steps to few checks, cabin low oxygen, and limits on drugs, fluids, and watching.
Suspected heart events: check and first careHandling suspected lung clots in airQuick spotting and treatment of severe allergyHeart versus low-volume shock stepsUse of oxygen, position, and fluidsWhen steps lead to diversion or heart revivalLesson 7Noting steps during and after events: in-flight records, handoff info for ground emergency help, event reporting to airline operations and aviation health bodiesThis lesson covers exact noting during and after events, including organised in-flight notes, times and treatments, short handoff to ground teams, and required reports to airline operations and aviation health bodies.
Key parts of in-flight health notesTiming checks and treatmentsPreparing handoff for emergency services at landingSharing with cockpit and operationsEvent and safety reporting needsPrivacy and data protection mattersLesson 8Organised in-flight checks using remote health advice: aimed history, vital sign goals, use and reading of portable oxygen monitors, and watchingThis lesson explores organised in-flight checks using remote health support, stressing aimed history, symptom times, vital sign goals, oxygen monitor limits, and ongoing watching fitted to cabin height and tool limits.
Main check in aircraft cabinAimed history and symptom timeVital sign goals at cabin heightUse and limits of portable oxygen monitorsWhen and how to call ground health controlOngoing watching and re-checks