Lindberg
Final Approach
Did the FAA say that?APPROVED vaccines.
Did the FAA say that?APPROVED vaccines.
"Rumor and speculation"...go read the thread and decide for yourself. Or better yet, why don't you just call the FAA Aeromedical Branch and ask them? I did.Did the FAA say that?
Why would anyone do such a thing?"Rumor and speculation"...go read the thread and decide for yourself. Or better yet, why don't you just call the FAA Aeromedical Branch and ask them? I did.
APPROVED vaccines.
Jeez...I don't know. You mean, as opposed to asking your burning question of SGOTI on an anonymous web forum?Why would anyone do such a thing?
You'd think so, wouldn't you?...and of course, the Federal Government always uses such impeccable and readily apparent logic in its regulatory decision-making and enforcement.If the FDA has approved it, even under emergency authority, why would it not be an approved vaccine?
I've already read that thread. I haven't seen any of the threads on this subject address the problem of how pilots are supposed to know what the FAA expects in relation to vaccinations, approved or otherwise.
What answer did you receive?"Rumor and speculation"...go read the thread and decide for yourself. Or better yet, why don't you just call the FAA Aeromedical Branch and ask them? I did.
https://www.faa.gov/other_visit/avi...gations/designee_types/ame/amcs/phonenumbers/
That would be just adding to the rumor mill. Suffice it to say that I was pretty skeptical about COVID vaccination anyway just based on the science (or lack of it). The FAA did nothing to add to my comfort level.What answer did you receive?
APPROVED vaccines. And yes.....only rumor and speculation AFAIK. If you don’t buy it then you shouldn’t let it deter you. The FAA’s supposed stance on your pilot’s license and experimental vaccines shouldn’t be a factor in your health care decisions and whether or not to get vaccinated.
Dr. Chien also said that the issue is with vaccines that are not yet approved:
https://www.pilotsofamerica.com/com...cine-trials-and-medicals.127970/#post-2968999
In another post, if I understand it correctly, he implied that the FAA's position has been promulgated to all AMEs electronically:
Anti-malarials have virtually nothing to do with anti-viral vaccines. That said, I've never mentioned influenza nor any other vaccine that I've ever had, or routinely get. Of course, those are all FDA-APPROVED vaccines. Not part of a trial, not experimental, and not approved under an Emergency Use Authorization.I guess it never occurred to me to report vaccines...
One time I mentioned an anti-malaria drug I took while I was in Africa, but was no longer taking. The AME said, "they don't care about that".
I can understand the FAA being skeptical if you were part of the trials, but once it's release to the general public, I think it's approved, by default. People seem to want to look for trouble...Anti-malarials have virtually nothing to do with anti-viral vaccines. That said, I've never mentioned influenza nor any other vaccine that I've ever had, or routinely get. Of course, those are all FDA-APPROVED vaccines. Not part of a trial, not experimental, and not approved under an Emergency Use Authorization.
Certainly the FAA has given ALL pilots a reason, many reasons, to be wary of their entire Aeromedical process. I don't think it's "looking for trouble", I think it a prudent concern on the part of anyone who values their medical certification to fly an airplane.I can understand the FAA being skeptical if you were part of the trials, but once it's release to the general public, I think it's approved, by default. People seem to want to look for trouble...
The FAA doesn't care about half the stuff people here get twisted about.I guess it never occurred to me to report vaccines...
One time I mentioned an anti-malaria drug I took while I was in Africa, but was no longer taking. The AME said, "they don't care about that".
The FAA has promulgated regs and forms that answer this question.Jeez...I don't know. You mean, as opposed to asking your burning question of SGOTI on an anonymous web forum?
The FAA has promulgated regs and forms that answer this question.
That's got to be the most foolish way to get an answer. There's a multitude of reasons, but top of the list has to be that you won't get an official answer, so anything they tell you can only hurt, not help, you.Or...you could just call them on the phone.
Cite them.The FAA has promulgated regs and forms that answer this question.
14 CFR 61Cite them.
14 CFR 61
Then why'd you ask?LOL. That's what I thought.
Certainly the FAA has given ALL pilots a reason, many reasons, to be wary of their entire Aeromedical process. I don't think it's "looking for trouble", I think it a prudent concern on the part of anyone who values their medical certification to fly an airplane.
Yeah, that's a good plan. My Class III isn't due for another 18 months....Basic Med is on my list of things to do in that interval....Mac, I have a two-word recommendation for you: Basic Med.
Do it now, and if everything else goes to crap you’ll still be able to fly. Just don’t renew your 3rd class until all this gets resolved.
So the FAA's official position (as reported by avweb) is that it doesn't have an official position. That's quite different from the claims here that anyone who gets the vaccine will lose his medical.
I'm the OP. It's been over a month, recovered but for loss of taste and smell. Most concerned and the loss of smell affecting medical status going forward. My noise coming from the FAA on long term loss of smell?To The OP : get some common sense. and don't fly until the negative test after 14 days.
Do you really want to get hypoxic stupid- Covid is a LUNG infection!.
What should scare you, if you're a pilot, is that lack of official position. It means that your choice might still be either EUA vaccine or loss of your medical.So the FAA's official position (as reported by avweb) is that it doesn't have an official position. That's quite different from the claims here that anyone who gets the vaccine will lose his medical.
I'm the OP. It's been over a month, recovered but for loss of taste and smell. Most concerned and the loss of smell affecting medical status going forward. My noise coming from the FAA on long term loss of smell?
This is NOT official, this is from "Yours Truly": obtain a full sensitivity PCR and thus determine if you are still producing virus!. I think you want to know if you are going to have a "long haul" consequence, or not. I sure would.I was inquiring about what to do after a positive test, specifically the impact of not recovering sense of taste and smell, not about the vaccine. Unfortunately the vaccine is not going to be of much help to me at this point. Not even sure if I'm going to get it when it does become available.
I'm wondering about the various COVID vaccines....
- I work in a hospital in direct patient care and will get priority access to vaccination. I wonder if that hospital will require me to get a COVID vaccination
- I wonder if an Emergency Use Authorization from the FDA will be accepted by the FAA as FDA "approval" and they won't pull my Class III medical if I get the vaccination. Assuming I decide to get the vaccination...(I haven't decided yet)
The "flu vaccine thing or mask" thing seems common. Bryant Healthcare, in previous years, had their employees mask up if they chose not to take the flu vaccine that year.Work or fly ... I was forced to either never cover a specific surgical facility in early October prior to our (El Paso's) huge Covid outbreak or take the flu vaccine (I usually don't as I never get the flu). I'm a contractor and not an employee, but the employees of same facility were told at minimum they would remain masked permanently if they refused the flu vaccine. We were having an H1N1 problem here simultaneously with the Covid outbreak ...