The Ergonomics Open Journal

2008, 1 : 67-78
Published online 2008 November 28. DOI: 10.2174/1875934300801010067
Publisher ID: TOERGJ-1-67

Environmental Conditions and Psychophysiological Response of Pilots and Flight Attendants in Commercial Long-Haul Flights

Michael Trimmel
Medical University of Vienna, Kinderspitalgasse 15, A-1095 Vienna, Austria.

ABSTRACT

The impact of environmental conditions as found in aircraft on pilots and flight attendants was investigated by the EU-project HEACE. Measurements of 6 long-haul rotations, three Vienna–Delhi (7-h flights) and three Vienna– Tokyo (12-h flights with a rest of 3 hours for the crew during flights), were investigated in cooperation with Austrian Airlines on board of aircraft of the Airbus type. Besides the recordings of environmental conditions (air temperature, relative humidity, sound pressure level), also physiological measures and ratings were collected on 12 flights in 13 pilots and 64 flight attendants. The electrocardiogram was recorded continuously, BP, SpO2, and ratings (tiredness, health symptoms) were collected as spot measurements up to three times during flights and as baseline measures for which also heart rate (HR) and heart rate variability (pNN50) was computed. Analyses showed a great variety in environmental conditions and human response depending on flight duration, destination, area in aircraft, and task demands. Extreme observations include a temperature range from 18.5–27.7°C, 0% RH in the cockpit, 88 dB(B) in the rear of aircraft, HR of 135 during service, and 50% of SpO2 measures in pilots during cruising were 􀀁 94% oxygen saturation. Ratings of dry eyes/skin symptoms and tiredness are increased with flight duration. Results indicate that mean values reflect only very small aspects of the diversity in flight conditions and human response.

Keywords:

Aviation, high altitude, environment.