[Stress and fatigue in long distance 2-man cockpit crew].

Jan 1, 1996Wiener medizinische Wochenschrift (1946)

Stress and tiredness in two-person long-distance cockpit crews

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Abstract

Pilots experienced a sleep deficit of 8.2 hours during transmeridian flights due to night operations.

  • During transmeridian flight schedules, pilots lost one night of sleep because return flights were conducted at night.
  • Sleep was shortened by 2 hours during a 14-hour layover on the north-south route compared to baseline sleep.
  • Consecutive night flights resulted in a total sleep loss of 9.3 hours upon returning to the home base.
  • Taskload ratings were low during Atlantic flights but moderate during north-south transitions.
  • Fatigue ratings increased with longer flight durations, reaching critical levels during certain return flights.
  • Objective measurements indicated drowsiness and low alertness during all night flights studied.

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