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Fatigue, Schedules, Sleep, and Sleepiness in U.S. Commercial Pilots During COVID-19
Attribution
This is the abstract and citation. Full text lives at NASA NTRS — we link out rather than host. All credit to the authors and Ames Research Center.
Abstract
Verbatim from NASA NTRS. Not paraphrased, not summarized.
Introduction: COVID-19 has had a significant impact on the aviation industry. While reduced flying capacity may intuitively translate to reduced fatigue risk by way of fewer flights and duty hours, the actual impact of the pandemic on pilot fatigue is unknown. Methods: We surveyed US commercial airline pilots in late 2020 (n = 669) and early 2021 (n = 156) to assess the impact of COVID-19 on schedules and fatigue during the pandemic. Results: Overall, pilots reported reduced flight and duty hours compared to pre-pandemic. Average sleep on workdays was slightly shorter in late 2020 (6.88 h) and recovered to pre-pandemic levels in early 2021 (6.95 h). Similarly, the frequency of sleepiness on days off and in-flight increased in late 2020, with 54% of pilots reporting an increase in in-flight sleepiness, then returned to pre-pandemic levels in early 2021. The use of in-flight sleepiness countermeasures remained the same across assessed time points. Pilots highlighted several factors which impacted their sleep and job performance, including limited access to nutritional food during duty days and layovers, reduced access to exercise facilities during layovers, increased stress due to job insecurity and health concerns, increased distractions and workload, and changes to scheduling. Discussion: Despite a reduction in flights and duty days, COVID-19 led to increased sleepiness on days off and in-flight, potentially due to the negative impact of lack of access to essential needs and heightened stress on sleep. Operators need to monitor the change in these COVID-19 related risks as the industry returns to full service.
Authors
- Cassie J Hilditch San Jose State University
- Erin E Flynn-Evans Ames Research Center
Keywords
- sleep
- aviation
- COVID-19
Citation: Cassie J Hilditch, Erin E Flynn-Evans (2023). Fatigue, Schedules, Sleep, and Sleepiness in U.S. Commercial Pilots During COVID-19. Ames Research Center. NASA NTRS ID 20230003107. https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/20230003107 ↗