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Air Travel Emergencies

A rescuer moves through the upsidedown fuselage of the Azerbaijan 2025 plane crash

Breaking Down Airline Safety: Early Evacuation Insights from the Azerbaijan Airlines Crash

  • Posted by Mike Shertz MD/18D
  • Categories Air Travel Emergencies

🕖 Reading Time, 3 minutes

REPUBLISHED 17 Feb 2025, Original Publication 25 Dec 2024

Researched and written by Mike Shertz, MD/18D, not AI

Azerbaijan Airlines Flight J2-8243, an Embraer 190, crashed in Kazakhstan on December 25th, 2024. There were 62 passengers and 5 flight crew on the aircraft. Twenty-nine survived the crash.

Although it has been confirmed the aircraft crashed secondary to Russian anti-aircraft fire, there are still teaching points on air travel emergencies relevant to passengers world wide.

A body cam photograph showing a rescuer in an upsidedown plane crash

The aft section of the aircraft landed upside down. Experts feel that only about 1% of airline crashes result in aircraft landing upside down. This is much more common in general aviation (small private) plane crashes, where the plane’s nose digs into the ground and flips over. Larger commercial aircraft don’t do that on impact very often. In this case, the tail section broke off some distance from the rest of the aircraft crash site and came to rest inverted.

Moving toward the emergency exits in an upside-down aircraft will be disorienting and challenging. The seat backs will be a visual barrier when looking for exits. In the US, the FAA requires emergency exit path lighting at the floor level. This ensures it is visible in a smoke-filled cabin, but in an upside-down smoke filled aircraft, it will not be visible.

Emergency exit doors should still open upside down, as most floor-level exits open horizontally. Precisely following the opening diagram on the door should still allow passengers to open the door.

Evacuation slide ramps deploy automatically when the emergency exit is opened. Slide ramps inflate straight out from the aircraft fuselage and then drop down into place with gravity.  If the aircraft comes to a stop upside down, the slide ramps will still inflate straight out, but when they drop down, they will overhang the emergency exits, further slowing passengers exiting the plane.

In most of the videos of the crash site currently available, an evacuation slide ramp is seen visible, laying off to the side of the aircraft. However, a very early video shows it attached to the fuselage, inflated, and partially blocking the 2R aft floor-level exit.

Air Travel EmergenciesBetter Able-bodied Passenger & Crew

Related:

Preliminary Lessons Learned from JAL516 Crash

Daily Mail diagram showing events of JAL516

Related:

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A photo showing the underside of a commercial airline seat with red retaining strap and the safety card diagram of its use
Mike Shertz MD/18D

Dr. Mike Shertz is the Owner and Lead Instructor at Crisis Medicine. Dr. Shertz is a dual-boarded Emergency Medicine and EMS physician, having spent over 30 years gaining the experience and insight to create and provide his comprehensive, science-informed, training to better prepare everyday citizens, law enforcement, EMS, and the military to manage casualties and wounded in high-risk environments. Drawing on his prior experience as an Army Special Forces medic (18D), two decades as an armed, embedded tactical medic on a regional SWAT team, and as a Fire Service and EMS medical director.

Using a combination of current and historical events, Dr. Shertz’s lectures include relevant, illustrative photos, as well as hands-on demonstrations to demystify the how, why, when to use each emergency medical procedure you need to become a Force Multiplier for Good.

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