Health
Trainee Doctors Praised for Heroic Response After Deadly Air India Crash in Ahmedabad
The swift response of trainee doctors and medical students is being hailed as a critical factor in reducing casualties after an Air India flight crashed into a medical college campus in Ahmedabad, killing at least 270 people on Thursday.
The crash occurred shortly after takeoff, when the aircraft plunged into the hostel and dining hall of a medical college, leaving devastation in its wake. Only one passenger among the 242 aboard survived, while at least 29 others on the ground — including five medical students — were also killed.
Witnesses described scenes of chaos and horror, but also of courage and solidarity. Navin Chaudhary, a trainee doctor who narrowly escaped the blaze, recounted the moment the disaster struck.
“I had just started eating when there was a huge bang,” he said. “Flames swept through the hall, and I had no choice but to jump out of a window.” From the ground, he saw the tail cone of the Air India aircraft embedded in the burning building — a sight that propelled him and others into action.
Instead of fleeing, Chaudhary ran to the hospital’s intensive care unit to help treat the injured. “I was lucky to survive,” he said. “But as a doctor, I knew I had a duty to save others.”
Senior student Akshay Zala described the crash as feeling “like an earthquake.” Struggling to breathe through thick smoke, he made his way to safety, treated a gash on his leg, and then joined other medics at the trauma centre.
Authorities believe the death toll would have been even higher without the immediate intervention of these trainee doctors, who rescued colleagues from debris and rushed to treat patients in overwhelmed emergency wards.
By Monday, recovery operations were still underway at the crash site, where excavators worked through the rubble and investigators examined remains for clues. Just a kilometre away, surviving students continued identifying victims through DNA testing.
The remains of 47 people have been returned to their families, with another 92 victims identified through DNA analysis.
College dean Dr. Minakshi Parikh praised the young medics for their composure and courage. “Many of them pulled their friends out of the rubble, then went straight to work saving others,” she said. “That spirit is still carrying them through.”
Images from the aftermath showed the dining hall strewn with debris, luggage, and untouched plates of food — frozen remnants of a normal day cut short.
“They might not have survived if they had waited for rescue teams,” said Dr. Parikh. “But they didn’t wait. They went back in.”
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