Passenger collapses at Bradley International Airport, Windsor Locks CT
Please note:
This is not an official report. The headline and summary are generated by automated AI systems from public-safety dispatch audio. Always verify with official sources.
As discussed during the dispatch call, emergency crews responded to a medical incident at Bradley International Airport when a passenger collapsed after leaving an aircraft. The person was conscious and breathing, and the cause appeared to be a possible panic or anxiety attack. Fire and ambulance units were dispatched to assist.
Audio|Heard on: Bradley Int'l Airport Fire/Rescue
Listen to dispatch call
01:46
Transcript:
00:00
I'm going to be.
00:07
WNFA 274, Bradley Fire Department responding to gate number seven.
00:12
Gate number seven in the seating area with operations for a passenger that disembarked the aircraft and collapsed.
00:22
Possibly anxiety attack, conscious, alert, and breathing with no head strikes.
00:26
Repeating WNFA 274, Bradley Fire responding gate number seven.
00:31
For a passenger coming off the aircraft in front of operations who collapsed, conscious, alert, breathing,
00:37
possible panic attack, no head strike, 12-08.
00:46
Dispatch 8's respondent.
00:48
You can go ahead and let our enable.
00:52
En route, ambulance requested, (number withheld).
01:01
To engineer, Nate,
01:02
do you need ALS or a BLS hospital?
01:07
Yeah,
01:08
whatever you can get, if we need ALS, I got a medic with me.
01:14
Roger Osser.
01:15
It's probably going to be a Grammy out of your honor.
01:17
Okay, so.
01:24
Where you say if then we're arrived, okay, so.
01:32
State Arrival, 1211.
01:41
Schedule today should be Granby Ambulance.
01:45
All right.
Disclaimer:
This transcript is automatically generated by AI from live dispatch audio. Dispatch communications may include background noise, overlapping speakers, or rapidly evolving situations, and automated transcription may not capture all details or context.
Note:
Auto-generated from live dispatch audio, which may contain errors. Dispatch calls are not confirmed incidents. Always verify with official sources.
