When the seatbelt sign is off during a flight, most passengers immediately reach for their phones, laptops or headphones. Conversations are rare, and strangers often remain strangers. But for 17-year-old Soneesh Kothagundla, that familiar “ding” became something more powerful: an opportunity to save lives. Instead of settling into another routine flight, the young health advocate used the moment to deliver an unexpected announcement about lung cancer screening. What began as a bold idea inside a crowded airplane has since evolved into a national awareness movement reaching millions of people.
The idea first struck Kothagundla during a routine flight while he was thinking about how to spread awareness about lung cancer screening. Inspired by advocacy campaigns that used creative public messaging, he realized airplanes offered a rare opportunity: hundreds of passengers listening at once. After hearing the chime signaling passengers could move freely, he approached a flight attendant with a prepared public service announcement. Rather than reading it herself, the attendant handed him the intercom. Standing in the aisle, the teenager addressed the cabin directly, urging passengers to learn about life-saving lung cancer screening.
The reaction on the plane surprised him. Some passengers applauded after the announcement, while others approached him with questions about screening and prevention. One traveler shared that his father had died of lung cancer and said he had never heard about screening before. That moment reinforced the impact of what seemed like a small action. Kothagundla continued delivering similar announcements on future flights, turning spontaneous advocacy into a mission. What began as a single speech soon captured attention beyond the airplane cabin.
He later shared his experience on social media, where the story spread rapidly across professional networks. Soon, other students began replicating the idea, using flights to raise awareness for causes ranging from mental health to environmental protection. The hashtag #FlightPSAMovement gained traction online as more young advocates joined the initiative. The airplane, once just a place of quiet travel, had become a surprising stage for public awareness campaigns. The movement demonstrated how a single act of courage could inspire a larger wave of activism.
Kothagundla’s advocacy is grounded in research as well as passion. As a research intern at leading medical institutions, he helped study why so few eligible adults receive lung cancer screenings. The findings revealed a troubling gap in preventive healthcare. Only about 18% of people who qualify for lung cancer screening actually receive it. Yet many of those same individuals participate in other preventive screenings, such as those for breast or colorectal cancer.
The data suggests the problem is not resistance to healthcare but a lack of awareness. Many patients simply do not know they qualify for screening, and some doctors do not raise the topic during routine visits. Meanwhile, lung cancer remains the deadliest cancer in the United States. It claims more lives than breast, prostate and colon cancers combined. For Kothagundla, closing this awareness gap became a personal mission.
The airplane announcements were only the beginning. Recognizing that awareness needed to reach people everywhere, Kothagundla helped launch large-scale public campaigns with the American Lung Cancer Screening Initiative. These efforts included billboards and bus shelter advertisements in major cities across the United States. The campaigns quickly generated more than 90 million impressions. By placing messages in everyday spaces, the initiative brought lung cancer awareness directly into people’s daily routines.
The strategy was simple but powerful: if people are not actively searching for information about screening, bring the message to them. Commuters saw the message while waiting for buses or driving to work. Travelers heard it while flying across the country. Social media amplified the campaigns further, allowing the message to reach global audiences. The result was a growing movement focused on making lung cancer screening impossible to ignore.
Kothagundla also transformed his experience into a book designed to help other young people turn ideas into action. His book, Fasten Your Seatbelt: We’re Changing the World, serves less as a memoir and more as a practical guide. It explains how students can start research projects, build advocacy campaigns and influence policy even while still in school. The book quickly became a bestseller in multiple categories on Amazon. Its message resonated with young readers eager to create change in their communities.
In an unexpected twist, the book is even being considered as part of a restorative justice program in a Georgia juvenile court. The initiative would encourage young offenders to read the book and develop leadership projects inspired by its lessons. For Kothagundla, that possibility carries more meaning than sales or rankings. It represents the chance to help other young people redirect their energy toward positive impact.
Despite his achievements, the teenager’s long-term goals reach even further. Kothagundla hopes to become a thoracic surgeon, treating lung diseases directly through surgery. Ultimately, he dreams of one day serving as the U.S. Surgeon General. His ambition reflects a larger vision: combining medical expertise with public advocacy to improve national health outcomes. The airplane announcements were simply the first step in a much larger journey.
His story highlights how innovation sometimes begins with the simplest moments. A routine flight, a quiet cabin and a single idea turned into a nationwide movement. By refusing to remain silent when the seatbelt sign turned off, Kothagundla demonstrated the power of speaking up for a cause. The lesson is simple but powerful: when opportunity appears—even at 30,000 feet—one voice can make a difference.
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