Impact of Layover Length on Sleep, Subjective Fatigue Levels, and Sustained Attention of Long-Haul Airline Pilots

May 25, 2012Chronobiology international

How layover length affects sleep, tiredness, and attention in long-haul airline pilots

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Abstract

Pilots with a short layover of 39 hours reported higher subjective fatigue levels compared to those with a long layover of 62 hours.

  • Short layovers did not significantly affect the amount of sleep pilots obtained during flights.
  • Pilots with short layovers experienced poorer sustained attention during tasks.
  • Higher subjective fatigue levels were associated with short layovers at the midpoint of long-haul trips.
  • A minimum of 4 days off is recommended for pilots after short layovers to aid recovery before subsequent long-haul flights.

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