Dozens of Patients Treated Following Chemical Incident in London City Airport

LONDON (AP) — More than two dozen people were treated for breathing difficulties in a suspected chemical incident that sparked the evacuation of London City Airport Friday, fire and ambulance services said. After a three-hour investigation by police and firefighters in protective clothing, the terminal was declared safe. Police were not treating the incident as terrorist-related, and said they were investigating whether a canister of tear gas discarded by a passenger was the cause. Police and the fire brigade said they were called just after 4 p.m. (1500GMT) Friday to reports of passengers at the airport feeling unwell. With a fire alarm sounding, some 500 travelers and staff were evacuated to a parking lot and the tarmac near the airport runway. David Morris, 28, said he was checking in for a flight to Edinburgh when he started coughing. "It was getting quite bad and we saw other people starting to cough at the same time," he told Britain's Press Association news agency. "The people behind the desk were coughing the most and quite aggressively. "Within two minutes, they shouted for everyone to get out," Morris said. The London Ambulance Service said four ambulance crews and its hazardous area response team were sent to the scene. It said crews treated 27 patients at the airport for "minor breathing difficulties." Two of them were taken to hospitals. Three hours after the evacuation, London Fire Brigade gave the all-clear. "No elevate...
Source: JEMS Patient Care - Category: Emergency Medicine Authors: Tags: News Patient Care Source Type: news