Hoo-rah for you! Good to see you posting again, now please tell me how you cured the aphasia. I'm medical POA for a close friend suffering from it.I had a stroke in 2017. ( Aphasia) I have been stroke free since then.. I lost my ability to speak, I now have regained that ability.
What about this:
- A transient loss of control of nervous system functions without satisfactory medical explanation of the cause.
Anyway, glad to have you back.
He's on basic med. Is his doctor satisfied with the medical explanation? And is it compatible with safe flying? That's what matters.without satisfactory medical explanation
What about this:
Anyway, glad to have you back.
- A transient loss of control of nervous system functions without satisfactory medical explanation of the cause.
And what did Congress mean by "satisfactory"?
A medically valid diagnosis?
or
A medically valid diagnosis plus treatment sufficient to reduce the risk of incapacitation to normal?
or ?
Basic med depends on what your doctor says, not what any other doctor says.That is a problem in eyes of some. The stroke was the cause which in my mind was the medical explanation. According to Dr Chien, (at least in 2018), you have to know the cause of the stroke, which the exact reason is often not known.
I am speaking from personal experience, I had a stroke in 2016, waited two years and jumped through the hoops to get my full medical back. I got my basic med but was advised that I didn’t meet the requirements based on the above. My flying plans included planes outside of what is allowed by basic med so I didn’t pursue the matter further.
Good luck and let me know if I can be of any help.
Jim
What if the FAA decides that the statute requires you to get a one-time SI? It seems like there is a lack of case law on that.Basic med depends on what your doctor says, not what any other doctor says.
How would the FAA ever have the occasion or opportunity to make that determination? When you do basic med, this info isn't sent to the FAA. So how could the statute intend for the FAA to make that determination?What if the FAA decides that the statute requires you to get a one-time SI? It seems like there is a lack of case law on that.
He's on basic med.
How would the FAA ever have the occasion or opportunity to make that determination? When you do basic med, this info isn't sent to the FAA. So how could the statue intend for the FAA to make that determination?
Is MOSAIC sort of an expanded Sport Pilot?
Yes and no. The doctor completing your BasicMed comprehensive medical exam can sign off your exam but that does not necessarily mean that you're in compliance with 14 CFR 68.9 in order to actually operate under BasicMed.Basic med depends on what your doctor says, not what any other doctor says.
I don't know, but people have reported receiving "it appears you do not qualify for BasicMed" letters from the FAA.How would the FAA ever have the occasion or opportunity to make that determination? When you do basic med, this info isn't sent to the FAA. So how could the statute intend for the FAA to make that determination?
Sounds like you copied and posted one of my old power point slidePeople continue to think of Basic Med as a sort of "Class 4" FAA medical. It isn't. Basic Med is not an FAA medical at all; rather, it's an alternative to having an FAA medical. It's strictly between the pilot and the pilot's own physician.
If that physician determines that he cannot sign the Basic Med form because the applicant has one of the conditions requiring a one-time SI, then an AME and the FAA get involved. Not before.
Apart from the one-time Class 3 requirement, it's really more akin to Sport Pilot and its driver's license requirement (in fact, Basic Med also requires you to have a US driver's license). With Sport Pilot, if your physician determines that you're blind in one eye and can't see out of the other (for example), you might have to surrender your driver's license and would no longer be able to fly. The FAA aeromedical folks have no involvement.
Those letters go out when someone completes the online training course and attestations, but has either never had a medical, their last medical was revoked, or their last application for a medical was denied.I don't know, but people have reported receiving "it appears you do not qualify for BasicMed" letters from the FAA.
The doctor doing your exam is not making any assessments as to whether you have medical conditions that require a one-time special issuance. That's on you, the airman, to determine.
But the airman has to ask. The state licensed physician has no idea that 68.9 exists, and is not obligated to evaluate the airman in consideration of 68.9.True, but it's unreasonable to expect the non-physician airman to know enough on his own to make that determination. Therefore, he's dependant upon his examining doctor to advise him and provide enough info so he can determine whether a condition falls into the SI requirement.
If a state-licensed physician tells the airman, "We understand the cause of this stroke and have sufficiently mitigated the issue, and you're sufficiently recovered, that I'm not concerned about you operating a vehicle including your airplane," then who is the layman pilot to doubt him?
Basic Med seeks to provide the airman with information, through the physical exam every 4 years and the course every 2, that he can determine whether he's safe to fly. As far as I can tell, there's no requirement for the Basic Med pilot to seek out info beyond those two sources.
I suspect it would have to be a pretty blatant case before FAA attorneys would even consider trying to pursue a 61.3 violation as a result of non-compliance with 68.9.
It sounds like what's required is a good-faith effort on the part of the airperson.But the airman has to ask. The state licensed physician has no idea that 68.9 exists, and is not obligated to evaluate the airman in consideration of 68.9.
For example, you could have had a medical that expired in 2008. In 2009, you had a received a stent. In 2022, you appear before a state licensed physician for a BasicMed exam, having fully disclosed the stent. That physician may be perfectly happy with signing off your CMEC. However, you might not be aware that a stent is considered evidence of "coronary heart disease that has required treatment" and requires a one-time SI.
if you aren't familiar with 68.9, and don't ask the doc, and the doc doesn't know enough about BasicMed to inform you, then you may think you're in compliance with BasicMed when in fact your not.
Now if you ask, and your doctor says you're in compliance with 68.9, then that's evidence in your favor if an enforcement action were to ever take place. But ultimately, the FAA makes the call on compliance with the regulation, regardless of what the doctor says. But as noted, there's no case law on any of this. I suspect it would have to be a pretty blatant case before FAA attorneys would even consider trying to pursue a 61.3 violation as a result of non-compliance with 68.9.
What it really requires is for the airman to understand the peculiarities of operating under BasicMed. It's not like the 3rd class medical, where if the doc issues the medical, you're good to go.It sounds like what's required is a good-faith effort on the part of the airperson.
Precision is important when discussing laws and regulations, and this one says, "without satisfactory medical explanation of the cause . . . " If I wanted to know if an event has a "satisfactory medical explanation of the cause," I know exactly who I'd ask.As to what "without satisfactory cause" means, as Palmpilot noted, there's no case law to my knowledge on the topic.
That, too.What it really requires is for the airman to understand the peculiarities of operating under BasicMed. It's not like the 3rd class medical, where if the doc issues the medical, you're good to go.
According to Dr Chien, (at least in 2018), you have to know the cause of the stroke, which the exact reason is often not known.