Donate SIGN UP

Travelling with a broken wrist

Avatar Image
kestrelg | 16:58 Tue 16th Sep 2008 | Travel
6 Answers
12 days ago my wife broke her wrist and it is in plaster.
We are due to fly to Portugal on the 25th Sept and Thomsonfly won't give a clear answer as to whether they will let her board the plane. Has anyone any experience of this attitude and how did they resolve it
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 6 of 6rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by kestrelg. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
There shouldnt be any reason why they wouldnt let her fly at all. I have flown with a plaster on my wrist and on a seperate occassion one on my leg, although that was all before the security was stepped up. So unless they are viewing it as a security issue it should be absolutely fine.
No reason not to fly.

Get a letter from you GP certifying that your wife is "fit to fly" and just tell Thomson ... It's okay, we've sorted it, we've got a "fit to fly" certificate.

We've come back from skiing trips with all sorts of casts and bandages on each other (not me, touch wood).

Your wife is flying to Portugal, not crawling there.

my cousin went to majorca with her foot bound up the day after an op to remove a broken drawing pin from it (ouch) she had a fit to fly cert and even better was upgraded to a poolside room so she could "rest it while watching the children play"
I flew with a broken shoulder last year, and BA were excessively kind. Only thing, I was not allowed to sit at emergency exits.
Many airlines operate a policy which mirrors advice given within the "Yellow Book", the common name for "Health Information for Overseas Travel" first issued in 1995 by the Department of Health as a companion to the already popular "Immunisation against Infectious Disease" (aka "Green Book").

"It is advisable to wait 24 hours after a plaster cast is applied before a flight of under two hours and 48 hours if the flight is longer (or bivalve the plaster)."

This advice is, of course, not relevant in the case of a cast applied 12 days previously.

1 to 6 of 6rss feed

Do you know the answer?

Travelling with a broken wrist

Answer Question >>