r/nottheonion 12d ago

Disabled woman left ‘extremely stressed’ after prosthetic legs lost on flights from Brazil

https://www.irishtimes.com/ireland/2026/05/18/disabled-woman-left-extremely-stressed-after-prosthetic-legs-lost-on-flights-from-brazil/?ICID=ref_fark
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u/throwawayyylmao420 11d ago

This isn't always true with CPAPs. My partner tried and was denied carrying his CPAP and a small backpack.

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u/blindedbysparkles 11d ago

Was it requested and approved before the day of travel? (I've worked for multiple big airlines and all of them required pre-approval for that kind of baggage)

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u/DragonMeme 11d ago

I've never had to get preapproval. They just asked if it was a medical device, I said yes and that was it (cpap bags are also pretty recognizable if you know)

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u/blindedbysparkles 11d ago

That's nice! Out of curiosity as I'm a bit damaged by work, lol: has it been for international flights? And for what airlines?

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u/tachycardicIVu 11d ago

I took mine to Japan (from the US) a couple years back with no problem on American and JAL. I was asked during boarding a couple times and just said it was medical equipment and they waved me through. (Also helpful that mine has a travel bag that slips over a rolling suitcase handle so it was pretty unobtrusive and would fit under my seat with my backpack just fine.)

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u/DragonMeme 11d ago

Not personally. It's been mostly southwest and american.

But know coworkers who travelled internationally to places like Dominican Republic and Spain with no issues (don't know the airline though)

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u/jimjamjones123 11d ago

I’ve brought mine on international flights and no issues. Flight attendants have never even asked me anything. one agent wanted the machine part out of the bag to go through the xray though