Elizabeth Sedway, Cancer Patient, Kicked Off Alaska Airlines Flight

Elizabeth Sedway, Cancer Patient, Kicked Off Alaska Airlines Flight, A California woman suffering from cancer said she and her family were kicked off an Alaska Airlines flight to San Jose from Hawaii on Monday when an airline worker insisted that she needed a doctor's note to fly.

As a result, Elizabeth Sedway missed her chemotherapy appointment on Tuesday.

Sedway, who suffers from multiple myeloma, wrote on Facebook that she had been waiting in the disabled section of the boarding area and wearing a surgical mask to protect herself from germs when an airline worker asked her if she needed help.

At first, Sedway said she did not. But when asked again, Sedway said she may need assistance as she sometimes gets weak.

"Because I said the word weak, the Alaska Airlines employee called a doctor she claimed was associated with the airlines," Sedway wrote on Facebook. "After we board the plane. An Alaska representative boarded the plane, and told us I could not fly without a note from a doctor stating that I was cleared to fly."

The video Sedway posted on Facebook shows her and her family being escorted off the plane.

Today, we were at gate 8 ready to depart on Alaska Airlines for San Jose. An airline employee saw me seated in the...

Posted by Elizabeth Sedway on Monday, April 6, 2015

"I'm being removed as if I'm a criminal or contagious because I have cancer, no note to fly," she said on the video. "My family is being forcibly removed from an airplane because I have cancer, no note to fly."

Sedway apologized to the other passengers on the flight for holding them up

"God bless you," one passenger can be heard saying.

Sedway told KTLA that she emailed her doctor during the exchange.

“He said … ‘if you feel fine you should be able to fly,'” Sedway told the station. But since he didn't specifically say she was cleared to fly, they took her off the plane.

Sedway said an airline worker told her they were concerned about flying over the ocean with a sick passenger.

The airline has issued an apology, which was cited by CBS San Francisco:

“We regret the inconvenience Ms. Sedway experienced yesterday and are very sorry for how the situation was handled. Her family’s tickets have been refunded and we will cover the cost of her family’s overnight accommodations in Lihue. While our employee had the customer’s well-being in mind, the situation could have been handled differently.”
Sedway wrote in the a Facebook update early Wednesday that she plans to donate the refund.

"As with most unpleasant times, there are silver linings, if we're determined to find them," she wrote. "Here, we plan to donate the airfare, to be refunded by Alaska Airlines, to the Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation – MMRF. Additionally, this airline will likely look at future events of this kind with increased wisdom and sensitivity."

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