On the afternoon of March 29, a thrilling scene occurred on a flight from Beijing to Chengdu. About an hour and a half after takeoff, a young male passenger suddenly started to convulse, his hands were stiff, his eyes were rolled up, he was foaming at the mouth, and he was unconscious, his situation was very critical. At this time, the plane was at a height of 10,000 meters, and the crew made an emergency announcement to call for medical help. Fortunately, three neurosurgeons happened to be on the flight. One doctor held the patient’s head and let the patient’s head rest on his left arm. The other two doctors helped check to see if the patient had any medications or relevant medical records with him, but unfortunately, none were found. The patient was convulsing, but his breathing and heart rate were essentially normal; his pupils were somewhat dilated, but normal for a patient with a grand mal seizure. After lying on the doctor’s arm for five or six minutes, the patient gradually calmed down. The doctor asked the crew to help loosen the patient’s seat belt, took a small pillow, and had the patient lie on his side in the chair. He instructed the crew that it was normal for patients to fall asleep for a while after a seizure, and that it was okay to keep watching. After 20 minutes, the male passenger slowly regained consciousness and turned to safety. The doctors then learned that the male passenger had never had a seizure before, and they repeatedly instructed him to go to the hospital immediately after getting off the plane. When a seizure occurs, the patient may suddenly faint or his or her body may keep convulsing. If the right assistance is not given in time, it can be harmful to the patient. So what exactly is the proper first aid when a seizure occurs? Now let’s introduce it to you. There is a common misconception that an epileptic patient needs to bite down on chopsticks, fingers or other objects to avoid biting his tongue when he has a seizure. This is actually a wrong approach. According to the U.S. (CDC) and the U.K. (NHS), the main things that can be done include lying the patient on his or her side, removing anything around him or her that could cause an accidental injury, padding the head properly (Putsomethingsoftandflat,likeafoldedjacket,underhisorherhead.), loosening the tie and Loosen the tie and collar (so as not to interfere with breathing), and remove your glasses. It is useful to keep a record of the time of the episode and how it manifests itself for the patient and his or her physician. Things not to do include forcibly restraining the patient’s limbs, putting things in their mouths, and not giving them food or water until they are fully awake. These 3 first aid points should be paid more attention to: 1. Let the patient lie on his side to facilitate the discharge of respiratory secretions; the significance of letting the patient lie on his side is to allow the white foam in his mouth to flow out without being sucked back to block the trachea, and not to compress the breathing by lying on his back, and not to stuff his mouth for fear of affecting the discharge of white foam and causing the patient to choke. 2, keep the air around the patient circulation, do not surround the patient; epilepsy patient condition seizure, want to take first aid measures, the first is to keep the air circulation. Generally seizure patients, the surrounding people will subconsciously go up to care about the state of the patient, although out of the goodness of their hearts, but did a bad thing. A reasonable approach is to keep the air around the patient circulating and not to gather around. 3. Loosen the collar of the patient’s clothes to keep the patient breathing smoothly. Remove sharp objects such as glasses from the patient’s body and take out dentures if you can; loosen the patient’s tie and untie or take off tight clothes so that the patient can breathe smoothly.