• @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      English
      29 hours ago

      A quick internet search suggests 36 weeks (eight months), which is well into the third trimester, is the most common start of restrictions, and many airlines will accept a doctor’s note the woman is low risk even past that. It was a 2008 election blip when the media got ahold of Sarah Palin flying while in labor because she wanted her special-needs baby delivered by the medical team that had prepared for him, which suggests even the written restrictions in airline policy are not consistently enforced.

    • @kiagam
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      213 hours ago

      If a doctor clears you, they can’t deny it.

      • @Dozzi92
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        1013 hours ago

        Sure they can. “My doctor said I can!” Well, they say you can’t. Why would a doctor’s note get you on an airplane?

        • @syreus
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          19 hours ago

          It would shed the liability from the Airline.

          • @Dozzi92
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            18 hours ago

            I mean, sure, maybe in the ensuing lawsuit they could be like hey, her doctor said it was cool, but it doesn’t change the fact that there’s a baby being born on an airplane in transit. Nobody wants that, airlines will shut that down, and it’s not discrimination, it’s just a good decision.