The death of a man as a result of cardiac arrest near the domestic luggage collection area received national coverage after a Durban woman posted her experience of the ordeal on social media.
Among her concerns were an out of order Automated External Defibrillator (AED), perceived lack of an emergency plan and an alleged response time of over 10 minutes from medical professionals at the airport.
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Esta historia es de la edición October 03, 2024 de The Citizen.
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JOSE IS 'SPECIAL'
The Spaniard is on the cusp of making Bucs the first side to win the MTNS8 three consecutive times.
'Rusty' Foden is on the way back
Phil Foden said he is still \"rusty\" but scored his first goal of the season as Manchester City thrashed Slovan Bra tislava 4-0 to record their first Champions League win of the campaign.
Bok takeaways benefit Morne
Talented scrumhalf Morne van den Berg is hopeful of implementing lessons learned.
Challenge to big 5 law firms
Minister gazettes legal code which sector indicated they would litigate against.
Woolies boss gets R100m
Bagattini's total remuneration drops to R65.3m in FY2024.
Shrinking lake on Albanian-Greek border struggles to survive
Plants and reeds have sprouted up as the waters of Little Prespa Lake on the Albanian-Greek border recede, their beauty overshadowing a painful truth: the lake is slowly dying.
'Only link to outside world'
It has become one of few reliable sources of information left.’
Iran will 'pay' for missiles
Tehran warns of even bigger attack.
Africa's road safety crisis
The dilapidated state of vehicles isa major factor.
Acsa denies lack of medical safety measures
Airports Company South Africa (Acsa) has denied having inadequate medical safety measures after a death at King Shaka International Airport on 14 September.