Requests for assistance for airline passengers
with intellectual disabilities have seen a nearly eight-fold
increase in Asia, following a 10-month long campaign to raise
awareness of a dedicated Special Service Request (SSR) booking
code by travel technology company, Travelport.
SSR codes are used in the airline industry to
communicate traveler preferences or needs to airlines. They are
delivered through standardized four-letter codes defined by the
International Air Transport Association (IATA). The DPNA SSR code
can be used by travel agents, among others, to alert airlines when
a passenger has intellectual or developmental disability and needs
assistance.
The official description of the DPNA SSR code, as
outlined by IATA, is: “Disabled Passenger with Intellectual or
Developmental Disability Needing Assistance”. The code needs to be
accompanied by additional descriptive free text, so the airline
understands the support required. Once an IATA member airline has
received the code, a response acknowledging the request is
mandatory.
Travelport launched its Travel Unified campaign in
March 2019 after it found evidence of exceptionally low use of the
code on bookings made through its global distribution system.
Of the more than 250 million flight bookings made through
Travelport in 2018, the DPNA code was applied to just 4,309
bookings – approximately 0.0015%; despite an estimated 2.6% of the
world’s population having an intellectual disability. A poll of
travel agents and conversations with nonprofit organizations
confirmed this was due to a lack of awareness.
From the launch of the campaign up until the end
of 2019, use of the DPNA SSR code on flights booked through
Travelport in Asia increased by 762% compared to the same period
in 2018. Locations like India and Hong Kong saw exceptionally
large spikes of 458% and 243% respectively. In addition, the code
was used for the first time through Travelport in seven countries
in the continent: Israel, Kuwait, Mongolia, Oman, Pakistan, Sri
Lanka, and the United Arab Emirates.
As part of its campaign to raise awareness of the
DPNA SSR code, Travelport has shared educational ‘signon alerts’
and graphical ‘prompts’ more than 10 million times with hundreds
of thousands of travel agents across the world through Travelport
Smartpoint, its flagship Point of Sale solution that is used by
travel agents, among others, to search and book airline seats,
hotel rooms and more.
Mark Meehan, Travelport’s Global Vice President
and Managing Director of Asia Pacific, Middle East and Africa, and
Operators, said, “It’s heartening to see such a significant spike
in use of the DPNA code in Asia since we launched our Travel
Unified campaign. SSR codes play an important role in helping
travel agents effectively and officially communicate the needs of
travelers to IATA airlines, so it’s important agents are aware of
the codes at their disposal and the kind of support that can be
requested. At Travelport, we believe travel
should be an exciting, stress-free and dignified experience for
everyone, and are committed to doing what we can to help achieve
this. We look forward to taking our Travel Unified campaign to the
next level in 2020.”
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