'Miracle in the sky': Toronto doctor delivers baby girl mid-flight
A Toronto doctor's skills were put to the test last month when she was called upon to help perform a delivery on a transcontinental flight.
Dr. Aisha Khatib says she works well under pressure, so when the flight attendant on her Qatar Airways flight asked if there was a doctor on board, she wasted no time volunteering her skills.
The flight departed from Qatar on Dec. 7 and was bound for Uganda, where Khatib was travelling for work.
“It was about an hour into the flight,” Khatib told CTV News Toronto on Friday. “They basically asked if there was a doctor or medical personnel on board.”
Khatib, who works as the clinical director of travel medicine at MEDCAN and assistant professor with the Department of Family and Community Medicine at the University of Toronto, was directed to the back of the plane, where a woman appeared to be in labour.
“I saw this woman — she was lying with her head towards the aisle and her feet toward the window and the baby was coming,” she said.
Khatib says her training kicked into gear and she immediately began to help the woman.
“Someone threw me a pair of gloves and we had to lean over this woman to get this baby as it was coming out,” she said.
Khatib says she had to force herself into the small space between the window and the woman’s legs in order to access the delivery.
“I was right up against the window with mom pretty much straddling me as I'm trying to get enough blankets underneath to decrease the chance of having a mess,” she said.
“I was just thinking ‘I need clamps. I need scissors. If I don't have clamps, I’ll need shoelaces’ and just trying to figure out what to do with this situation if I didn't have the materials.”
Luckily, Khatib said the flight crew was equipped with a delivery kit, giving her access to birthing tools needed.
Aided by two other medical professionals flying that day — a nurse and a pediatrician — Khatib says she was able to deliver the baby girl in a healthy and safe manner.
“I was able to cut the cords, cut the umbilical cord. And check the baby over,” she said. “The baby was crying and had colour and so I gave her a good rubdown and passed her over to the pediatrician,” she said.
The successful delivery was met with a round of applause from onlooking travellers.
“Mom looked okay — she looked stable, so I was like, ‘Congratulations. It's a girl!’ and the whole plane just started clapping,” Khatib said.
“I had totally forgotten I was delivering a baby on a plane.”
Both the mother and baby were in good enough shape to continue for the remainder of the flight. They were moved to first-class and monitored for the remaining five hours, Khatib said.
In a tweet, Qatar Airways said they are "truly grateful for the incredible efforts" of Khatib and are glad to hear the mothe rand baby are doing well.
The mother, a Ugandan woman, decided to thank Khatib by naming the baby after the doctor.
“She named her Miracle Aisha,” Khatib said.
Khatib says she has kept up with the mother and baby, both of which she says are doing well in Uganda.
As a token to remember her by, Khatib left the baby girl with a small gift.
“I happened to be wearing a necklace of my name in Arabic at the time and so I gave it to her,” she said.
“I wanted her to know where she came from — delivered by a lady named Aisha as we flew over the Nile.”
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Asking rent prices up 9.3% across Canada, Ontario sees only decline: report
A new report says the average asking rent for a home in Canada in April was up 9.3 per cent compared with a year ago, while a slight month-over-month increase was also recorded for the first time since January.
Prince William says wife Kate is 'doing well'
Prince William said on Friday his wife Kate was 'doing well' in a rare public comment about the Princess of Wales as she undergoes preventative chemotherapy for cancer.
'I may have some nightmares:' Man survives being bitten by 2 sharks in Bahamas
A man who was bitten by two sharks in the Bahamas said Thursday he's 'thankful that I'm here' while sharing his story of survival.
Ontario coroner to investigate death of man who suffered cardiac arrest while waiting in ER
A provincial coroner will be investigating the death of 68-year-old David Lippert, who suffered a cardiac arrest while waiting in a crowded emergency room in Kitchener, Ont.
Magnitude 4.2 earthquake reported off Vancouver Island's west coast
A 4.2-magnitude earthquake was recorded west of Vancouver Island early Friday morning.
'Irate male' assaulted Newfoundland officers with block of cheese, police say
Police in Newfoundland say patrol officers were assaulted Thursday by a "very irate male" wielding a block of cheese.
Dashcam video shows terrifying near-miss on two-lane northern Ontario highway
There were some scary moments for several people on a northern Ontario highway caught on video Thursday after a chain reaction following a truck fire.
Average hourly wage in Canada now $34.95: StatCan
Average hourly wages among Canadian employees rose to $34.95 on a year-over-year basis in April, a 4.7 per cent increase, according to a Statistics Canada report released Friday morning.
Canadian Blood Services apologizes to LGBTQ2S+ community for discriminatory blood donation policy
Canada's longstanding blood donation policy that prevented sexually active men who have sex with men and some trans people from donating blood and plasma was harmful and discriminatory, Canadian Blood Services acknowledged on Friday, in issuing an apology to the LGBTQ2S+ community.