I'll see your Basic Med and raise you a Sport Pilot.BasicMed reopened flying for people who are getting older
Oh come on, that's when the real fun begins! You get to fly a new airplane every time!I figure when I can't remember the gate code to the airport, the code to unlock the hangar, or which of the airplanes inside is mine, it's time to give it up.
I wondered the same, but discounted the idea because the study specifically excludes that group:Unsubstantiated musing: BasicMed reopened flying for people who are getting older and had/have non-cognitive medical issues which removed them from the cockpit in the past - often (I speculate) at an age before they started showing significant cognitive decline. Now that medical conditions are less likely to remove people from flying, I wonder if cognitive impairment is on the rise in the (older) flying community as those pilots who would have been grounded continue to age.
Zero data to back this up. Just an interesting hypothesis. But if so, the FAA getting ahead of this seems like a reasonable thing to do in the interest of public safety.
Yeah, but you have the opportunity to set the bar low here!Sounds like the FAA giving us the rope to hang ourselves with. I’d run far and fast in the opposite direction and never participate.
I didn’t think we had met lol.Yeah, but you have the opportunity to set the bar low here!
Yeah, but $300!Sounds like the FAA giving us the rope to hang ourselves with. I’d run far and fast in the opposite direction and never participate.
They do know pilots, don’t they?Yeah, but $300!
Dating those younger women... way to go, RickOnce my girlfriend was given one (probably because the Doc knew who I was and wondered about her sanity) and was asked to draw a clock showing ten after three. She wrote 3:10 inside a box.
Doc said “HaHa, we’ll skip the rest of the test”.
Unsubstantiated musing: BasicMed reopened flying for people who are getting older and had/have non-cognitive medical issues which removed them from the cockpit in the past - often (I speculate) at an age before they started showing significant cognitive decline. Now that medical conditions are less likely to remove people from flying, I wonder if cognitive impairment is on the rise in the (older) flying community as those pilots who would have been grounded continue to age.
Zero data to back this up. Just an interesting hypothesis. But if so, the FAA getting ahead of this seems like a reasonable thing to do in the interest of public safety.
True. I still do wonder if that’s a potential issue for BasicMed and even Sport Pilot (thanks, Capt GT).If that’s their interest, wouldn’t they include Basic Med pilots in the study? This is limited to 3rd class medical folks only.
True. I still do wonder if that’s a potential issue for BasicMed and even Sport Pilot (thanks, Capt GT).
Please read post 20. They started this nearly three years ago and were testing pilots of all ages with all classes of medicals. I suspect this is just the last subset they need. All the 60+ YO recreational pilots probably went to basicmed.Personal opinion, without anything to back it up:
FAA can't do much of anything about Basic Med, but they can make changes to the Class 3. I suspect that if the study shows meaningful cognitive decline in older pilots, they will mandate cog testing for older pilots seeking a Class 3. If that happens, it will lead to insurance companies requiring class 3 for older pilots and not accepting Basic Med at all.
It seems to me they'd have a more meaningful study if they tested a broad spectrum of pilots, then looked for groups that showed decline. Instead they're targeting a single demographic at the outset and that makes me a bit suspicious of their motives. Notice, too, that by only seeking pilots with Class 3 medicals, they're excluding revenue pilots and ducking pushback from airlines and other aviation businesses.
I took the cogscreen at osh a couple years ago. She said they were trying to develop a test that aeromed could use to determine if a pilot applying for a medical with some sort of disqualifying issue has the mental acuity to be issued. At that time they were establishing the baseline. Not sure if this is filling in a subset of data they were missing or trying to verify their results. I saw flyers at osh last year looking for participants of certain age/medical classes, so I suspect the former.
I wouldn't say it was fun, but it was interesting. I learned that I can remember a much longer string of numbers accurately than I would've guessed. Kind of funny; I used to write down those 6 digit verification codes that certain websites give you. Now I know i can reliably remember up to 8, so I don't bother
When I took it, they were looking for people with any class of medical. Last summer the flyers had different age ranges for class 1,2, or 3.As I live in OKC, I have had a few friends do this study. As you mention, it does appear they're narrowing the range on data they need. For the past several months it was ages 50-64, now it's just 60-64. The people who take it agree with you that it was interesting, though not "fun" exactly. But an interesting way to make a few hundred dollars.
I'm not sure why they limit it to pilots operating under third class privileges, but that rules me out. (Of course, I wouldn't be eligible for the $300 anyway as an FAA employee.)
I have in the past been able to participate in a few other CAMI research studies. One was in an FTD testing out different configurations of AOA indicators and verbal indications, which involved flying a ton of approaches at various speeds. Interesting although admittedly after a couple hours my performance definitely degraded. Another was simply applying and holding rudder pressure on an instrumented test rig. I believe in that one they were looking at changing the rudder force standards for multiengine aircraft with engine failures - setting Vmc and such.