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Co-pilot lands aircraft safely after pilot loses consciousness

February 01, 2013 03:33 pm | Updated 03:37 pm IST - PORTLAND (Oregon)

An Alaska Airlines jetliner bound for Seattle made an emergency landing in Portland, Oregon, on Thursday night, after the pilot lost consciousness, an airline spokesman said.

The co-pilot landed Flight 473 safely after declaring an emergency to get priority care for the pilot, spokesman Paul McElroy said. All of the airlines’ pilots are trained to fly single-handedly.

The pilot lost consciousness “somewhere over Oregon,” McElroy said, then later regained consciousness and left the cockpit. A doctor on board the flight tended the pilot in the cabin until the plane landed and was taken care of by the medical personnel on the runway.

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The pilot, who was not identified, was taken to a hospital but there was no immediate word on his condition, McElroy said.

The Boeing 737—700 with 116 passengers and five crew members left Los Angeles about 6.30 p.m. and touched down in Portland at about 9 p.m. It had been due to arrive in Seattle at 9.30 p.m.

McElroy said the pilot has been flying for Alaska for 28 years and was currently on the six-month medical evaluation. The co-pilot is an 11-year Alaska Air veteran.

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Similarly incident

On January 22, the co-pilot on an Alaska Airlines flight from Seattle to Las Vegas fainted briefly, and the pilot requested emergency landing priority to get prompt medical assistance for him.

“At this point we do not believe there was any connection between the two incidents,” McElroy said.

Twenty passengers with a tight schedule for connecting flights were put on a Horizon Air shuttle flight to Seattle on Thursday night, the spokesman said.

A new pilot was dispatched to Portland to fly the flight to Seattle.

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