However, the lack of procedures to identify pilots who should not be flying under BasicMed and prevent them from operating aircraft raises questions about the impact of the new rule
"Moreover, FAA cannot make a meaningful comparison between the BasicMed rate of accidents and fatalities to those occurring among pilots holding a medical certificate because the Agency does not collect data on BasicMed pilots’ flight hours."
"NTSB also identified these missing data in a September 2014 safety study on pilot impairment. The study found that it was not possible to compare the safety of medically certificated pilots with those flying under the sport pilot and light sport aircraft rule [...] because there is limited information about the number and flight activity of pilots without medical certificates"
One has to wonder if the system of (again) not collecting data was put into place to protect the existing third class medical requirement.
And you just thought you had freedom....
Comments
1) this is how bureaucracy grows and burdens on the public increase.
2) how did the congress critters vote on the original basic med proposal and what lobby groups contribute to their campaigns? This sure sounds like something done to stop or slow down use of this medical provision (in part because it gives the government less control).
We're talking .015 suspected non-compliance. My Dad used to call this "picking fly **** out of pepper. " But, I guess, generally speaking, that's the OIG's job description.
Requested by the Chairmen of the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and its Aviation Subcommittee
So, according to the data, the primary cause of pilot incapacitation is a valid medical.This plot shows the number of accidents (of ALL aircraft) in the US each year that involved pilot incapacitation.
View attachment 89596
So, according to the data, the primary cause of pilot incapacitation is a valid medical.
So, according to the data, the primary cause of pilot incapacitation is a valid medical.
I have to wonder if somehow the newly regulated adsb is going to play a new role in even more regulation....
maybe... but I don't recall PIC being one of the fields in the ADS-B out message.
unless you want to think there will be a required modification to add PIC information...
And over 50% of the incapacitation cases involved pilots with Commercial or ATP tickets. Get rid of them, and the incapacitation rate drops precipitously. About 5% of the incapacitation accidents involved pilots with valid Class 1 medicals.So, according to the data, the primary cause of pilot incapacitation is a valid medical.
And over 50% of the incapacitation cases involved pilots with Commercial or ATP tickets. Get rid of them, and the incapacitation rate drops precipitously. About 5% of the incapacitation accidents involved pilots with valid Class 1 medicals.
Ron Wanttaja
And over 50% of the incapacitation cases involved pilots with Commercial or ATP tickets.
Actually, most of the aircraft involved do not require two pilots. Twenty-one cases (1998-2017) involved ATPs, but there no airliners and just two business jets (and one was a Citation being operated single-pilot). The rest were typical GA aircraft.Presumably they’re mainly flying two pilots in a cockpit, so that an incapacitation might be survived and recorded.And over 50% of the incapacitation cases involved pilots with Commercial or ATP tickets. Get rid of them, and the incapacitation rate drops precipitously.
Often the autopsy *does* show something. But it's not binary; 75% artery occlusion does not mean a happy landing while 76% means a crash. Some cases are otherwise inexplicable....For single-pilot operations, unless an autopsy shows something, I’m not sure how often anyone would know that a loss of control was due to medical incapacitation.
But also, on average, the pilots who spend the most percentage of their lives in an airplane.Those would be the pilots with the greatest motivation to mask medical problems, no?
The NTSB ruled this one as "Pilot incapacitation for unknown reasons," and given the circumstances, I don't think the ruling was unreasonable. But it's true, there's no way to be completely sure.
Ron Wanttaja
Could he not have just fallen asleep? I did once on a ferry flight of a cropduster but was fortunate the change of sound as the plane picked up speed woke me up.
How long has it been since your last sleep study?Could he not have just fallen asleep? I did once on a ferry flight of a cropduster but was fortunate the change of sound as the plane picked up speed woke me up.
How long has it been since your last sleep study?
Certainly. Any number of things which may or may not have been detectable in an autopsy. Could have just fallen asleep, could have been altitude-related (last departure airport has 6,600 foot elevation), could have been a mini-stroke, could have been low blood sugar, could even have been suicide.Could he not have just fallen asleep?