Can someone explain why this is a bad thing? (Thats a serious request)
Can someone explain why this is a bad thing? (Thats a serious request)
As someone who is currently trying to sort out possible OSA before I go for my medical, it sounds like not being grounded while I deal with it is a good thing, no?
is it just the fact that sleep apnea grounds a recreational pilot?
Because OSA in not necessarily a black and white thing. It takes the decision away from the pilot in say the IM SAFE acronym to make a safe evaluation of ones state mentally and physically in relation to their ability to safely fly a flight at that point in time. It takes it away from the individual and turns it into a blanket one size fits all since you have the possibility to be fatigued, you may not fly at all.
For commercial ops, I have no problem. It is done in the trucking industry.
I'm wondering what problem this fixes? ....is this a problem causing accidents?
I'm wondering what problem this fixes? ....is this a problem causing accidents?
I'm wondering what problem this fixes? ....is this a problem causing accidents?
I think the only recourse now is to have Congress cut their funding.
And go back to Continuous Resolutions without a budget, to keep them guessing and years behind where they "want to be".
I never realized how dumb it was of me to care enough to help push hard on politicians to vote them in a real budget, until after I did it.
Rookie mistake. Unknown budgets subject to being stolen by other more popular pork projects work way better to keep waste down as much as it can with trillions in loan money available.
Can someone explain why this is a bad thing? (Thats a serious request)
As someone who is currently trying to sort out possible OSA before I go for my medical, it sounds like not being grounded while I deal with it is a good thing, no?
is it just the fact that sleep apnea grounds a recreational pilot?
Here'sthe link to the new guidance:
https://www.faa.gov/news/fact_sheets/news_story.cfm?newsId=18156
>>>
What is the new guidance?
BMI alone will not disqualify a pilot or require an OSA evaluation. The risk for OSA will be determined by an integrated assessment of history, symptoms, and physical/clinical findings. OSA screening will only be done by the AME at the time of the physical examination using the American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM) guidance provided in the AME Guide. Pilots who are at risk for OSA will be issued a regular medical certificate and referred for an evaluation which may be done by any physician (including the AME), not just a sleep medicine specialist, following AASM guidelines. If an evaluation is required, a laboratory sleep study or home study will not be required unless the evaluating physician determines it is warranted. The pilot may continue flying during the evaluation periodand treatment, if indicated.. The airman will have 90 days (or longer under special circumstances) to accomplish this. The FAA may consider an extension in some cases. Pilots diagnosed with OSA and undergoing treatment may send documentation of effective treatment to the FAA to arrange for a Special Issuancemedical certificate to replace the regular medical certificate.
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I'm wondering what problem this fixes? ....is this a problem causing accidents?
Gee....maybe DOT should look into this for boat captains too.YES!!! Sleep Apnea causes many accidents every day.
Gee....maybe DOT should look into this for boat captains too.
OK....I'm with you on that.They started long ago, truck drivers too. Resistance isn't futile on this one, resistance is downright stupid! You cost yourself a large percentage of potential quality of life out of the pride of believing "I don't have a problem! I don't need that crap, I'm stronger than all that."
OK....I'm with you on that.
But, is regulation and all the bureaucracy and intrusion that goes with it needed for this?
Is this really a safety of flight issue that will improve the accident stats? I bet not. :wink2:
really?...in airplanes?This is as unintrusive as it gets, and sadly yes, it is necessary because these stupid people who refuse to get treated are killing innocent bystanders when they fall asleep behind the wheel.
If it were a safety issue, then all drivers should be mandated. I want every driver around me to be tested for OSA every 2 years before being issued a license to drive a 6 ton truck and trailer around the freeway. Train engineers, boat captains, drivers, pilots. It's only fair....
I fly an aircraft that weighs less than most cars. It moves at roughly car speed. It carries car kinetic energy. Why I need more medical supervision to fly it than someone who drives a car is beyond me. Especially when an overwhelming body of data shows unequivocally that it doesn't do a blind bit of good.
Amazing, they actually listened. Sounds good, it addresses the problem with minimal cost and risk to certification. No reason not to report because it isn't going to cause a denial, just start the process to getting you treatment. If you already have treatment, provide proof of treatment and you are already golden.
The issue is a real issue, and getting treated is reported as 'life altering' in a positive manner by many getting treated.