INTRODUCTION: Long-distance neonatal air transport did not begin in hospitals, but rather in times of crisis, driven by courage, ingenuity, and humanitarian resolve. Early operations transformed aircraft into lifelines, carrying children across borders and conflict zones under austere and often perilous conditions. DISCUSSION: In early humanitarian flights, the 1939 Czech Kindertransport was the first to demonstrate aviation's potential for child rescue. This was followed by postwar efforts such as Operation Magic Carpet and Cold War evacuations such as Operation Peter Pan. Infants and children were transported with limited medical support, relying on improvisation, speed, and human determination. Operations Babylift, Moses, Joshua, and Solomon increased the scale and ambition of these efforts, incorporating newborns into long-range missions under extraordinary logistical and political constraints. Though primitive by today's medical standards, these flights proved that aircraft could be used for more than war; they could also protect and save lives. Modern neonatal aeromedical transport realizes this vision with dedicated aircraft, incubators, and specialized teams capable of sustaining critically ill neonates across continents. Programs such as the Netherlands' helicopter emergency medical service, the European Air Ambulance, and the United Kingdom's Children's Air Ambulance continue the ethical and humanitarian legacy of these pioneering missions. When an infant's life is at risk, flight is imperative. CONCLUSION: Each neonatal air mission carries forward a century of courage, innovation, and moral conviction, turning the sky into a corridor of survival for the most vulnerable. Bellini C, Davis A, Stocking JC. From humanitarian airlifts to neonatal intensive care in the sky. Aerosp Med Hum Perform. 2026; 97(7):550-560.
Bellini et al. (Wed,) studied this question.