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Chitchat If You Have a Heart Attack in a SQFlight, Ann Sim Will Resuscitate You Back to Life!

AhMeng

Alfrescian (Inf- Comp)
Asset
Cabin crew: Taking duty of care to the skies
Singapore Airlines cabin crew Ann Sim shares how her background as a trained nurse – harking back to the vocation of the first-ever female cabin crew in 1930 – and voluntary medic stands her in good stead on board a flight

STORY BY SILVERKRIS MAGAZINE
Published on August 17, 2017, Updated on August 17, 2017

Ann-Sim-SCDF1.jpg

Having majored in nursing, Ann Sim worked as a staff nurse in Changi General Hospital for three years before joining Khoo Teck Puat Hospital as an emergency medicine nurse for another two years.

“I wanted a change of environment; to do something out of my comfort zone,” she says when asked what prompted her to make the move to Singapore Airlines.

Ann-Sim-21.jpg

From being always on the move in scrubs and trousers, Sim found that having to don the Singapore Girl kebaya and to adopt a more gracious manner of speaking were among the challenges she faced as a new cabin crew. “I’m thankful for the facilitators and friends in my training batch who helped to look out for me,” shares Sim. “They remind me that I should walk more gracefully.”

In the fourth year of her career with the Airline now, Sim has not left her nursing training behind – she still volunteers as a medic with the Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF) Auxiliary Unit. “It helps me to stay updated with what goes on in the medical world, and get hands-on experience instead of just reading books.”

This training came in handy when Sim encountered an emergency on board a Singapore-Australia flight, during her first year as a cabin crew. She recalls, “The flight was taking off when a mother started screaming that her baby was not breathing. I immediately asked my colleague to inform the captain to stop the takeoff. We then rendered assistance as a team, and everyone was very cooperative. The flight took off, and all the passengers were happy that everything turned out well.”

Continually seeking to improve herself, Sim also signed up for a company-sponsored three-month intensive German course. “I learnt to do announcements on our German routes, and also communicate with our passengers who don’t speak English. Even for something as simple as helping them with their choice of meal, informing them of the landing time or what the previous announcement was about; being able to speak their language helps to make them feel more at ease.”

Sim has also been an assignment girl for events like the FORMULA 1 SINGAPORE AIRLINES SINGAPORE GRAND PRIX, as well as the destination videos for Dusseldorf and Wellington when the routes were launched. But the favourite part of her career is still the opportunity to meet people. She shares, “We look forward to visiting the destinations and seeing the sights. But one of the best things about flying is meeting new people. We also become firm friends with the colleagues we work with on different flights.”

Watch Ann Sim share about her nursing and flying experiences in the video above.

Experience a career beyond the ordinary! Visit singaporeair.com/cabincrewcareers to find out how you can join us as a cabin crew member.

PHOTOGRAPHY: ZAPHS ZHANG
PHOTOGRAPHY ASSISTANT: ANGELA GUO

This article was originally published by Singapore Press Holdings.
 
Last edited:

AhMeng

Alfrescian (Inf- Comp)
Asset
This SQ girl did the opposite career move to be Nurse! Lol :biggrin:

SIA air-stewardess gave up flying to be a nurse
By ILDYKO ANG
30166261.JPG
Ms Ivy Tay is a nurse at the Singapore General Hospital. Photo: Najeer Yusof/TODAY
Published07 JULY, 2017
UPDATED 07 JULY, 2017

SINGAPORE — When a passenger collapsed onboard a flight where she was a crew member, Ms Ivy Tay was at a loss as to what to do.

They were flying from Johannesburg, South Africa to Singapore when the call button for a flight attendant sounded. This was a regular occurrence when passengers needed something, but what Ms Tay did not expect when she headed to the seat was to see a woman slumped, unconscious, with wine spilt from an overturned glass on the tray table.

When the crew found a doctor onboard the Singapore Airlines flight, Ms Tay was given instructions on the type of medication and dosage required, using the in-flight first-aid kit.
“At that point, I felt very defeated and I didn’t know what I was doing. There was a knowledge gap. I felt like a bimbo when the doctor gave me orders, and I thought I could be a lot more than that,” Ms Tay, who had been on the job for seven years then, recalled.


This incident 11 years ago spurred her to make a career switch and become a nurse instead. She is now an assistant nurse clinician at the emergency department of Singapore General Hospital (SGH).

On Friday (July 7), the 39-year-old was one of 100 nurses to receive the Nurses Merit Award.

In recognition of their outstanding performance and contribution for the past three years, recipients were given a medal and a cash award of S$1,000. Nurses were nominated for the award by their healthcare institutions and selected by a panel set up by the Health Ministry.

Ms Tay put in long working hours at the accident and emergency (A&E) unit, and it can sometimes be gruelling. For instance, an afternoon shift that ends at 10pm may sometimes be followed by a morning shift at 7am.

However, she said that the job satisfaction is “a lot greater” compared with working as an air-stewardess. “At the end of the day, I do see patients going back with some knowledge. When you give tips to them on how to manage their illness at home, they feel better about it and realise it’s not that difficult,” she said.

Although she has been a nurse for more than a decade now, it is a never-ending learning process, Ms Tay added. Last year, as a representative of the A&E department, she volunteered to fly to Sichuan, China to teach nurses there emergency skills such as mass casualty management. It became a two-way learning experience, after she encouraged the nurses to talk about how they weathered the aftermath of the Sichuan earthquake in 2008.
“Experience is something that you can’t get from books. It was very humbling to hear what they’ve gone through. They shared with me how lost they were when they reached ground zero. They didn’t know who to save first,” she recalled.

While Singapore is not prone to natural calamities, there are still security issues with the recent terror threats in the region. Ms Tay said that her time in Sichuan has “mentally prepared” her at least, in the event that hospitals here have to face similar situations of mass casualties.
 

AhMeng

Alfrescian (Inf- Comp)
Asset
And, meanwhile, if Lao Tiko @glockman is hospitalized in Ah Tiong land, he would be most happy...:biggrin:

Chinese hospital dresses nurses as air stewardesses

Hospital in eastern China has asked its nurses to dress as air stewardesses to please its patients

Air_hostess_nurses_2915571b.jpg

Nurses dressed as air hostesses in a hospital in China Photo: ChinaFotoPress/Zhu Dingzhao


By Malcolm Moore, Beijing
1:46PM BST 19 May 2014
Follow

For one hospital in eastern China, pristine white nursing uniforms were simply not glamorous enough.

So earlier this month, a pilot group of 12 nurses at the Lianshui Traditional Chinese Medicine hospital in the city of Huai'an began coming to work dressed as airline stewardesses.

"If you think of all the professions in the world, which one comes to mind when you think of good customer service?" asked Bu Haijuan, the head of the hospital's nursing unit. "It's airline stewardesses isn't it?"

Ms Bu dreamed up the idea to remind her nurses to improve their bedside manner and dismissed the suggestion that it might be demeaning for trained medical professionals to don the equivalent of a fancy dress costume.

"Nurses learn all sorts of technical skills at college but customer service can be easily overlooked," insisted Ms Bu. "But flight attendants are specifically trained to have a good attitude and manners."

So far, the hospital's scheme is voluntary and confined to one ward, but carries with it a higher salary. The nurses taking part were trained for a month by an actual stewardess from China Eastern Airlines.

The hospital said the new uniforms have slightly longer skirts, "for reasons everyone understands".

One nurse, 23-year-old Zhao Yanan, told the Yangtse Evening Post that she was enthusiastic about her new uniform and that she has started going to bed earlier so that she looks prettier in the morning.

"Cooks can wear white uniforms. Butchers can wear white uniforms. There is no regulation saying that nurses have to wear white," said Ms Bu. "We should think outside the box. We are trying to make the best use of our resources to improve our customer service."
Additional reporting by Adam Wu
 

glockman

Old Fart
Asset
Cabin crew: Taking duty of care to the skies
Singapore Airlines cabin crew Ann Sim shares how her background as a trained nurse – harking back to the vocation of the first-ever female cabin crew in 1930 – and voluntary medic stands her in good stead on board a flight

STORY BY SILVERKRIS MAGAZINE
Published on August 17, 2017, Updated on August 17, 2017

Ann-Sim-SCDF1.jpg

Having majored in nursing, Ann Sim worked as a staff nurse in Changi General Hospital for three years before joining Khoo Teck Puat Hospital as an emergency medicine nurse for another two years.

“I wanted a change of environment; to do something out of my comfort zone,” she says when asked what prompted her to make the move to Singapore Airlines.

Ann-Sim-21.jpg

From being always on the move in scrubs and trousers, Sim found that having to don the Singapore Girl kebaya and to adopt a more gracious manner of speaking were among the challenges she faced as a new cabin crew. “I’m thankful for the facilitators and friends in my training batch who helped to look out for me,” shares Sim. “They remind me that I should walk more gracefully.”

In the fourth year of her career with the Airline now, Sim has not left her nursing training behind – she still volunteers as a medic with the Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF) Auxiliary Unit. “It helps me to stay updated with what goes on in the medical world, and get hands-on experience instead of just reading books.”

This training came in handy when Sim encountered an emergency on board a Singapore-Australia flight, during her first year as a cabin crew. She recalls, “The flight was taking off when a mother started screaming that her baby was not breathing. I immediately asked my colleague to inform the captain to stop the takeoff. We then rendered assistance as a team, and everyone was very cooperative. The flight took off, and all the passengers were happy that everything turned out well.”

Continually seeking to improve herself, Sim also signed up for a company-sponsored three-month intensive German course. “I learnt to do announcements on our German routes, and also communicate with our passengers who don’t speak English. Even for something as simple as helping them with their choice of meal, informing them of the landing time or what the previous announcement was about; being able to speak their language helps to make them feel more at ease.”

Sim has also been an assignment girl for events like the FORMULA 1 SINGAPORE AIRLINES SINGAPORE GRAND PRIX, as well as the destination videos for Dusseldorf and Wellington when the routes were launched. But the favourite part of her career is still the opportunity to meet people. She shares, “We look forward to visiting the destinations and seeing the sights. But one of the best things about flying is meeting new people. We also become firm friends with the colleagues we work with on different flights.”

Watch Ann Sim share about her nursing and flying experiences in the video above.

Experience a career beyond the ordinary! Visit singaporeair.com/cabincrewcareers to find out how you can join us as a cabin crew member.

PHOTOGRAPHY: ZAPHS ZHANG
PHOTOGRAPHY ASSISTANT: ANGELA GUO

This article was originally published by Singapore Press Holdings.
wow, she looks totally different. From a two to an eight rating just by switching profession. :biggrin:
 

AhMeng

Alfrescian (Inf- Comp)
Asset
And for all of you out there who flies in and out of airports round the world, do note the the FIRST FLIGHT ATTENDANT in the world is ELLEN CHURCH, a registered nurse! :biggrin:

Ellen Church

Ellen Church (September 22, 1904 – August 22, 1965) was the first female flight attendant.[1]

Ellen Church

Born September 22, 1904
Cresco, Iowa

Died August 22, 1965(aged 60)
Terre Haute, Indiana

Education Bachelor's degree of nursing education, University of Minnesota

Occupation Flight attendant
Nurse

Employer Boeing Air Transport(Predecessor of United Airlines)

Known for First female flight attendant

Awards

Contents

Biography

Church was born in Cresco, Iowa. After graduating from Cresco High School, Church studied nursing and worked in a San Franciscohospital.[2] She was a pilot and a registered nurse.

Steve Stimpson, the manager of the San Francisco office of Boeing Air Transport (BAT), would not hire her as a pilot, but did pass along her suggestion to put nurses on board airplanes to calm the public's fear of flying.[2] In 1930, BAT hired Church as head stewardess, and she recruited seven others for a three-month trial period.[2]

The stewardesses, or "sky girls" as BAT called them,[1][3] had to be registered nurses, "single, younger than 25 years old; weigh less than 115 pounds [52 kg]; and stand less than 5 feet, 4 inches tall [1.63 m]".[1] In addition to attending to the passengers, they were expected to, when necessary, help with hauling luggage, fueling and assisting pilots to push the aircraft into hangars.[3] However, the salary was good: $125 a month.[1][2]

Church became the first stewardess to fly (though not the first flight attendant, as German Heinrich Kubis had preceded her in 1912). On May 15, 1930, she embarked on a Boeing 80A for a 20-hour flight from Oakland/San Francisco to Chicago with 13 stops and 14 passengers.[4] According to one source, the pilot was another aviation pioneer, Elrey Borge Jeppesen.[5]

The innovation was a resounding success - the other airlines followed BAT's example over the next few years - but an injury from an automobile accident ended her career after 18 months.

She obtained a bachelor's degree in nursing education from the University of Minnesota and resumed nursing.[1][6] In 1936, she became supervisor of pediatrics at Milwaukee County Hospital.[6] During World War II, Church served in the Army Nurse Corps as a captain and flight nurse and earned an Air Medal.[1] She moved to Terre Haute, Indiana, where she became director of nursing and later an administrator at Union Hospital.[6]

In 1964, she married Leonard Briggs Marshall, president of the Terre Haute First National Bank.[4][6]

A horse riding accident ended her life in 1965.[4][6]
 

glockman

Old Fart
Asset
And, meanwhile, if Lao Tiko @glockman is hospitalized in Ah Tiong land, he would be most happy...:biggrin:

Chinese hospital dresses nurses as air stewardesses

Hospital in eastern China has asked its nurses to dress as air stewardesses to please its patients

Air_hostess_nurses_2915571b.jpg

Nurses dressed as air hostesses in a hospital in China Photo: ChinaFotoPress/Zhu Dingzhao


By Malcolm Moore, Beijing
1:46PM BST 19 May 2014
Follow

For one hospital in eastern China, pristine white nursing uniforms were simply not glamorous enough.

So earlier this month, a pilot group of 12 nurses at the Lianshui Traditional Chinese Medicine hospital in the city of Huai'an began coming to work dressed as airline stewardesses.

"If you think of all the professions in the world, which one comes to mind when you think of good customer service?" asked Bu Haijuan, the head of the hospital's nursing unit. "It's airline stewardesses isn't it?"

Ms Bu dreamed up the idea to remind her nurses to improve their bedside manner and dismissed the suggestion that it might be demeaning for trained medical professionals to don the equivalent of a fancy dress costume.

"Nurses learn all sorts of technical skills at college but customer service can be easily overlooked," insisted Ms Bu. "But flight attendants are specifically trained to have a good attitude and manners."

So far, the hospital's scheme is voluntary and confined to one ward, but carries with it a higher salary. The nurses taking part were trained for a month by an actual stewardess from China Eastern Airlines.

The hospital said the new uniforms have slightly longer skirts, "for reasons everyone understands".

One nurse, 23-year-old Zhao Yanan, told the Yangtse Evening Post that she was enthusiastic about her new uniform and that she has started going to bed earlier so that she looks prettier in the morning.

"Cooks can wear white uniforms. Butchers can wear white uniforms. There is no regulation saying that nurses have to wear white," said Ms Bu. "We should think outside the box. We are trying to make the best use of our resources to improve our customer service."
Additional reporting by Adam Wu
Only if I get to unbutton their blouses, fondle them, and they offer special services. Else, I see no benefit at all. Won't help in my recovery woh. :biggrin:
 

Sir_Fcuk

Lunch Corporal
Loyal
Watch Ann Sim share about her nursing and flying experiences in the video above.

She shares, “We look forward to visiting the destinations and seeing the sights. But one of the best things about flying is meeting new people. We also become firm friends with the colleagues we work with on different flights.”

Experience a career beyond the ordinary! Visit singaporeair.com/cabincrewcareers to find out how you can join us as a cabin crew member.

PHOTOGRAPHY: ZAPHS ZHANG
PHOTOGRAPHY ASSISTANT: ANGELA GUO

This article was originally published by Singapore Press Holdings.

the best way I become firm friends with zar bor is to put my lil bro firmly into them, so i am sure she has firm friends
 
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