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Embry-Riddle Scholarly Commons · Journal article (IJAAA)
How Duty Rosters and Stress Relate to Sleep Problems and Fatigue of International Pilots
Attribution
This is the abstract and citation. Full text lives at Embry-Riddle Scholarly Commons — we link out rather than host. All credit to the authors and Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University.
Abstract
Verbatim from Embry-Riddle Scholarly Commons. Not paraphrased, not summarized.
While previous research focused on pilots’ fatigue, rosters, potential performance-impairment and aviation-safety, this research investigates, how pilots’ work-related and psychosocial stress and rosters can affect their sleep and fatigue. A cross-sectional online survey was completed by 192 pilots flying for European operators, 180 Australian pilots and 34 pilots from UAE, Turkey and Asia Pacific. Pilots reported their actual duty- and flight-hours, flown sectors, standby, rest, vacation days, number of early starts, night-flights and sports-hours for the last two months. Schedule-related data, way to work, age, flight-hours on the present type of aircraft, subjective job-security and psychosocial stress were used as independent variables to investigate, which significantly predict sleep problems (JSS) and fatigue (FSS). Seventy-six percent 76% of the active pilots reported significant fatigue (FSS≥4), 33.4% high fatigue (FSS≥5), although pilots were rostered for only 56.25% to 61.32% of the legally allowed duty and flight hours/month. Considerable sleep problems in ≥8 nights/month were reported by 24.2% pilots. Sleep problems were strongly associated with sleep restrictions and fatigue risks experienced on flight duty. More sleep problems were predicted by more stress and fatigue risks on flight duty. Higher fatigue-severity was predicted by more sleep problems, more stress, more fatigue risks experienced on flight duty, less physical exercise and shorter ways to work. Our findings suggest that present flight-time-limitations likely cannot prevent fatigue and potentially foster sleep-problems. In line with work-psychology and stress-research, psychosocial stress plays an important role for pilots’ sleep.
Authors
- Venus, Marion Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
- grosse Holtforth, Martin Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
Keywords
- International airline pilots
- rosters
- stress
- sleep problems
- fatigue
- Behavior and Behavior Mechanisms
- Psychological Phenomena and Processes
- Sleep Medicine
- Social and Behavioral Sciences
Citation: Venus, Marion, grosse Holtforth, Martin (2021). How Duty Rosters and Stress Relate to Sleep Problems and Fatigue of International Pilots. Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University. Embry-Riddle Scholarly Commons ID oai:commons.erau.edu:ijaaa-1579. https://commons.erau.edu/ijaaa/vol8/iss3/5 ↗