On two successive days this week, two pilots collapsed and died in the aircraft.
One of them was a friend and a former colleague, and both were much younger.
One was travelling as a passenger and the other was about to operate a flight.
My heart goes out to their families for their sudden and unexpected loss.
Many questions are being asked, and here is an attempt to answer them.
We have laid down checklists to follow in such cases. The other pilot, with help from the cabin crew, can take care of the plane and the incapacitated pilot, and land immediately.
Yes, of course. That's the first thing they're trained and tested for.?
Their working hours are odd and ever changing¡ªvery early morning today, afternoon tomorrow and then a whole night after that.?
Nature did not design humans to fly; and more importantly, nature wants us to follow its rhythms in terms of sleep, work and rest.
No job is small, but some are more demanding, less forgiving, and involve human lives. That adds to the stress of the job.
I have often worked 9 to 5¡ªnight 9 to morning 5¡ªand it's not easy.
Now try doing it two nights in a row with 'adequate', which is the minimum mandated, rest in between.?
Regulations, called Flight Duty Time Limitations (FDTL) exist, and are strictly enforced, but nature does not always obey humans, exactly like humans don't obey nature.
Your body does not react to your commands like a switch putting the light off or on, and you cannot fall asleep whenever you want, just because you must.?
These days we hear of many youngsters just collapsing and passing away. Apart from the increased pollution, in food, water, and air, some cases happen because of extremes, either too much physical effort, or almost none.
The human body can only take so much and no more.
In pilots, the effects show up, especially with age, but they're slow and subtle, so often get ignored, till something major happens
Will a passenger be able to land a plane, with guidance from experts on the ground?
Highly unlikely. For details, please see this post.
Will the autopilot be able to land the plane?
Possible, but autopilots have to be prepared for a landing. That, only a trained pilot can do.
Pilots need training, salaries, rest, leave, food, and comfortable cockpits. And they fall sick at short notice. Autopilots need nothing other than electric power and computers. Naturally, replacing pilots with autopilots is tempting because that translates into higher profits.?
With increased reliability, there are plans to fly planes with a single pilot?and even without any pilot on board.
It could be possible, but not yet.
Yes, but even that pilot would be working odd hours!
Having been a pilot, both in the military and in airlines, for 43 years, I have a personal slogan about this job.
The acronym is DESH.
Pilots should be:
Disciplined
Efficient
Safe, and
Happy
Disciplined, efficient and safe they already are, because they won't last long in this job without that. But making them happy requires corporate and regulatory effort.
In the olden days, when the only airlines were Sarkari, (Government owned) and overly unionised, their employees, who resorted to strikes and coercion, were seen as pampered, underworked and overpaid.
Things are quite the opposite now.?
And that needs to change, before it leads to a disaster.
What we need is a midway between the two extremes, so that our Desh (country) can fly into progress and prosperity with pilots who are DESH.
The writer is a former fighter pilot of the IAF and is now a commercial airline pilot. He is the author of three novels and many blog posts, available at?www.avinashchikte.com