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#1
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![]() Regrettably all a current medical certificate is useful for is knowing that the recipient WAS fit to fly at the time that they took the medical. Half an hour later, who knows. It's actually a little better than that. Since you must report all medications you are taking, the medical examiner can assess if one, or a combination of several medications, might impair your coordination and/or judgment which could affect your ability to act as PIC (or to drive a car for that matter). On the other hand, the AOPA is fond of (correctly) reporting that there is no statistical correlation between a pilot having a medical certificate and accidents due to medical causes. Tony V. LS6-b "6N" |
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"Tony Verhulst" wrote in message
. .. Regrettably all a current medical certificate is useful for is knowing that the recipient WAS fit to fly at the time that they took the medical. Half an hour later, who knows. It's actually a little better than that. Since you must report all medications you are taking, the medical examiner can assess if one, or a combination of several medications, might impair your coordination and/or judgment which could affect your ability to act as PIC (or to drive a car for that matter). On the other hand, the AOPA is fond of (correctly) reporting that there is no statistical correlation between a pilot having a medical certificate and accidents due to medical causes. Tony V. LS6-b "6N" My dad passed his 3rd class medical in the morning. Went out to the airport to test fly an airplane he was thinking of buying. Then passed out in mens room at the FBO from some complication from his (up to then) undetected prostate cancer (It was never clear to me excatly why he passed out...) -- Geoff The Sea Hawk at Wow Way d0t Com remove spaces and make the obvious substitutions to reply by mail When immigration is outlawed, only outlaws will immigrate. |
#3
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![]() "Frank Whiteley" wrote in message oups.com... http://www.kilkennyadvertiser.ie/index.php?aid=5621 There is really no correlation between medical status and certification as far as I can see. It is well documented that very few accidents have been attributed to a pre-existing medical condition. You never know your moment when flying. One day I was duty instructor at Husbands Bosworth and I was sitting in the back seat of our Ka2, cable connected, all out given, when the wing tip holder suddenly collapsed and dropped the wing. I released the cable at once, and fortunately the tug pilot was a bit slow to open up and there was no damage done. The wing tip man (who was NEXT to fly with me) had had a heart attack and in spite of our best efforts we could not revive him and he died at the scene. Very sad. I count myself very lucky that this event occurred when it did, and not twenty minutes later when we would have been airborne. There was no way that this episode could have been predicted or prevented as in those days only instructors had to hold a medical certificate which was annually renewed. My own doctor just used to look at me and sign, as it was the only time I ever visited his surgery. As it happens I am going to do a bit of gliding this summer, and as I am now 74 not un-naturally the club concerned has asked for a medical certificate in case I get to fly solo. My doctor on this occasion did in fact do a fairly detailed check of my vital functions but as he was basically doing only the same tests as those required for renewal of a driving licence after an illness I don't really feel that it tells us very much about my medical state. Alistair Wright |
#4
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On May 4, 11:01 am, "Alistair Wright"
wrote: "Frank Whiteley" wrote in message oups.com... http://www.kilkennyadvertiser.ie/index.php?aid=5621 There is really no correlation between medical status and certification as far as I can see. It is well documented that very few accidents have been attributed to a pre-existing medical condition. Depends on the arena looked at I guess. In commercial aviation the situation is similar to that of the millenium bug: after the date rolled over and nothing failed, lots of people spouted that there never was a problem and those billions of dollars should never have been spent on the issue. Of course, it was purely *because* that money had been spent that there were no issues. So it is with commercial aviation medicals. The fact that few - not none, but few - accidents are due to medical conditions points to the fact that the commercial medical certification process works. Cardiology is in fact very good at detecting pre-existing but superficially asymptomatic conditions. However the tests are expensive. An ASN database query gives: http://aviation-safety.net/database/....php?Event=FCI Note that the last incident - the 2004 USAF crash - seems to have parallels with the Kilkenny crash. Dan Dan |
#5
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On May 4, 12:12 pm, Dan G wrote:
An ASN database query gives: http://aviation-safety.net/database/....php?Event=FCI Should say that list is for "flight crew incapacitation", which includes a range of occurences. However a notable absence from that list is the 1972 Trident crash near Staines, just outside of London. The captain had an acute heart condition during a cockpit emergency that no doubt compounded the problem. Dan |
#7
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On May 4, 1:54 pm, Bullwinkle wrote:
Medical examinations are really useless in determining who is safe to fly. Very few pilots are grounded due to objective medical findings. Listening to the heart and lungs, looking in eyes and ears, reviewing EKG's and lab results: those items have a very low yield in detecting medical problems. ECGs and cholesterol levels - both tested in medicals - are good indicators of cardiac health. I expect pilots normally pass this part of the medical because they keep themselves healthy in order to do so. Cardiac disease is the second biggest killer in the 44-65 age group - behind cancer - and the fact so few pilots collapse at the controls suggests that these tests do work. In this case the results of the tests meant the crash pilot knew that sudden collapse was a stronger-than-normal possibility for him. The problem is that he knowingly put other people at risk too by continuing to tow and his club's procedures were not good enough to find him out. (And while afaik it's never happened it's conceivable that an out-of-control single seater could harm people on the ground. Such an event would be quite bad for gliding I think.) I think the point the accident report was making is that *everyone* needs to be properly checked that they meet requirements, and procedures should be put in place in Ireland to make sure that happens. I don't think that's harmful to gliding. Dan |
#8
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Alistair Wright wrote:
"Frank Whiteley" wrote in message oups.com... http://www.kilkennyadvertiser.ie/index.php?aid=5621 There is really no correlation between medical status and certification as far as I can see. It is well documented that very few accidents have been attributed to a pre-existing medical condition. snip Presumably most people who lose their medical certificate stop flying. Sort of the point of a medical, isn't it? There was no way that this episode could have been predicted or prevented as in those days only instructors had to hold a medical certificate which was annually renewed. My own doctor just used to look at me and sign, as it was the only time I ever visited his surgery. As it happens I am going to do a bit of gliding this summer, and as I am now 74 not un-naturally the club concerned has asked for a medical certificate in case I get to fly solo. My doctor on this occasion did in fact do a fairly detailed check of my vital functions but as he was basically doing only the same tests as those required for renewal of a driving licence after an illness I don't really feel that it tells us very much about my medical state. This is interesting to me. The way I see it: If "The Rules" (law, club, etc.) say you don't need a medical to fly a glider (as in the US), some group coming along saying "Your too old. We need to see a medical from you", should be told "Hook up to tow rope, then F--- Off!" ;-) Shawn |
#9
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![]() "Shawn" wrote in message . .. This is interesting to me. The way I see it: If "The Rules" (law, club, etc.) say you don't need a medical to fly a glider (as in the US), some group coming along saying "You're too old. We need to see a medical from you", should be told "Hook up to tow rope, then F--- Off!" ;-) Well let me tell you that the UK BGA have introduced rules about old pilots flying solo. When I get to 76, which will occur in about 18 months, I will no longer be allowed to fly without a safety pilot. I officially retired from instructing in 1978 and have not flown gliders since. However I do have 500 hrs P1 and 2100 sorties in my book. All of this cuts no ice with the BGA, or indeed the club I am going to fly with this summer. I have to produce a full medical certificate or I will not fly solo, assuming that I can cope with these new fangled glass ships. So I have had the medical. The fact that I am fitter than people twenty years my junior has nothing to do with it either. However I do not mind any of this in the least, as it was very re-assuring to be advised by my medical man that I was in better shape than some 50 year olds on his books. I still maintain my view that all this medical examining has little to do with the possibility of an accident or incident taking place due to some problem hitherto undiscovered. Alistair Wright Old wooden pilot |
#10
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There was another case where an airline captain who
had passed a full CAA Class 1 ATP medical only a few days previously had a heart attack and died during a commercial flight with many passengers on board. The co-pilot completed the flight without further incident. State regulation does not guarantee flight safety, but just costs pilots lots of money! Derek Copeland At 11:24 04 May 2007, Dan G wrote: On May 4, 12:12 pm, Dan G wrote: An ASN database query gives: http://aviation-safety.net/database/....php?Event=FCI Should say that list is for 'flight crew incapacitation', which includes a range of occurences. However a notable absence from that list is the 1972 Trident crash near Staines, just outside of London. The captain had an acute heart condition during a cockpit emergency that no doubt compounded the problem. Dan |
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