AN AUSTRALIAN dance teacher on board Singapore Airlines flight SQ321 will never be able to dance again after suffering severe spine injuries on the turbulence-hit aircraft.
Kerry Jordan, 52, also told Adelaide-based newspaper The Advertiser that she cannot do all “the basic things” with her hands, such as feeding herself, brushing her teeth, changing TV channel and using her mobile phone.
“I think that’s the hardest, not being able to feel most of my body,” she told The Advertiser from the Royal Adelaide Hospital.
Jordan suffered a break in her spine at the C7-T1 segment, which joins the neck with the upper back.
She also suffered a brain bleed, fractures of the C1 and C2 vertebrae at the top of the spine, and fractured ribs.
Jordan and her husband Keith Davis were returning from a holiday in the United Kingdom on May 21 when their plane experienced sudden extreme turbulence.
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According to British media Sky News, Jordan had returned to her seat and tried to put on her seatbelt when the turbulence happened.
Flight SQ321 was heading to Singapore from London when the plane climbed and descended rapidly twice in 62 seconds over the Irrawaddy Basin in Myanmar. One passenger died while dozens were injured.
The Boeing 777-300ER carrying 211 passengers and 18 crew members made an emergency landing at Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi Airport.
Jordan, who is a dance teacher at South Australia’s Mitcham Girls High School, said the incident was “absolutely violent”.
She said: “Literally everything just started shaking so much… All I remember was being up in the air and everything was absolutely silent and then I was on the floor.”
She was taken to Samitivej Srinakarin Hospital in Bangkok for an urgent surgery on a severe spinal injury and later medically evacuated to Adelaide.
News.com.au reported that she could not feel her legs immediately after the incident and had to remain on the floor for the rest of the flight.
Jordan, who faces months of rehabilitation, said she can move her arms but cannot use her hands.
Her husband told Australian media that he is awestruck with his wife’s resilience.
He said: “It’s just inspiring. I don’t know how she wakes up every day and just gets on with it.”
In May, Singapore Airlines apologised to the couple after Davis complained about the lack of information from the airline following the incident. THE STRAITS TIMES