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Journal Article

Citation

Lyons TJ, Ercoline W, O'Toole K, Grayson K. Aviat. Space Environ. Med. 2006; 77(7): 720-723.

Affiliation

Asian Office of Aerospace Research and Development, Tokyo, Japan. lyonst@aoard.af.mil

Copyright

(Copyright © 2006, Aerospace Medical Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

16856357

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Previous studies have determined that spatial disorientation (SD) causes 0.5-23% of aircraft crashes, but SD-related crash and fatality rates in different aircraft types have not been systematically studied. METHODS: SD crashes for the fiscal years 1990 to 2004 and aircraft sortie numbers for all U.S. Air Force (USAF) aircraft were obtained from the USAF Safety Center. Contingency table analysis and Chi-squared tests were used to evaluate differences in SD rates. RESULTS: SD accounted for 11% of USAF crashes with an overall rate of 2.9 per million sorties and a crash fatality rate of 69%. The SD rate was higher in fighter/attack aircraft and helicopters than in training and transport aircraft. The risk of SD was increased at night with 23% of night crashes being caused by SD. But the SD rate and crash fatality rate were not higher in single-crewmember aircraft. DISCUSSION: SD risk is significantly increased in helicopters and fighter/attack aircraft and at night. The data suggest that a second crewmember does not protect against SD. Further study of specific SD scenarios could lead to focused interventions for SD prevention.


Language: en

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