by thursday, all 21 injured passengers had been released from hospital. there were reports of back sprains, head injuries, nausea due to an aviation fuel leak and the anxiety that nolan referenced.
he stayed at the airport until about 7 p.m., almost six hours after the crash at 1:15 p.m. fortunately, he had an ideal support group in place when he was decompressing. the paramedics conference that began tuesday runs through thursday.
“the vast majority of the people here get it,” he said. “they can share stories.”
pete carlson, who was on the plane that crashed and flipped at the toronto airport on monday, speaks at a paramedic conference in toronto on tuesday.
handout
on tuesday, carlson, still sporting a cut on his forehead from the accident, spoke at the conference.
“he knocked it out of the park, speaking about helping the homeless with the medical and addiction issues in minneapolis,” nolan said.
some of the passengers who had received the emergency services on monday also showed up at the conference to offer their thanks.
looking back at everything, including the crash, the fire and the flipping of the plane, nolan said he was shocked that the damage hadn’t been more severe.
“it’s a blessing that no one died,” he said. “it still doesn’t compute that more people didn’t suffer severe injuries.”
the transportation safety board of canada recovered the black boxes on tuesday, and officials from the united states national transportation safety board and the federal aviation administration were also offering support in trying to determine what caused the crash.