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Indian doctor saves child’s life on flight

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NEW YORK — A quick-thinking Indian American doctor has saved the life of a 2-year-old boy who suffered an asthma attack on board a transatlantic flight by creating a makeshift inhaler out of a cup and a bottle.

Dr. Khurshid Guru, director of robotic surgery at the Roswell Park Cancer Institute in New York, was aboard the Air Canada flight from Spain to the US on September 18 when he was notified of the toddler in trouble.
The boy was crying and short of breath, and his parents had accidentally packed his asthma medication in checked luggage.
The child’s oxygen level was dipping down, and he needed oxygen, as well as asthma medication.
"The child had developed a cold," Guru, who hails from Jammu and Kashmir, said. "We were three or four hours into the flight. I think the cold and popping of the ears and crying. … He got worse."
After putting an oxygen meter on the child, Guru said he was disturbed to find the child’s oxygen level was dipping down to a dangerously low level–about 87 or 88 per cent. Guru, who normally doesn’t treat paediatric patients, said he knew he needed to do something quickly.
Instead, the doctor, who normally works with high-tech robots to treat patients, came up with a jerry-rigged device similar to a nebulizer that would deliver both oxygen and asthma medication to the crying child.
In order to create the nebulizer, the surgeon cut up a water bottle and added oxygen to one end and the adult inhaler through a small hole in the bottle. That way, the oxygen and medication could be delivered through the bottle’s opening directly to the child.
After the very unusual treatment, the child’s oxygen level was around 94 or 95 per cent.
Guru said he wanted to share the story as a reminder to parents of asthmatic children to always keep their vital medication handy.

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