
@article{ref1,
title="Flight crew physical fitness: a baseline analysis",
journal="Air Medical Journal",
year="1995",
author="Shaner, S. and Brooks, C. and Osborn, R. and Hull, M. and Falcone, R. E.",
volume="14",
number="1",
pages="30-32",
abstract="INTRODUCTION: The purpose of this pilot study was to determine whether flight crew personnel are physically fit in comparison to published standards for the average American adult. SETTING: The study group consisted of pilots, paramedics and nurses in two similarly configured and geographically located rotor-wing air medical transport programs. METHODS: A physical fitness assessment of flight crew members was conducted. The results were compared with published standards for average adult males and females (AVG). Percentage of fat in body composition (FM%), aerobic fitness (VO2MAX), muscular endurance (ME), muscular strength (MS) and flexibility (FL) measurements were obtained using accepted testing methods. RESULTS: The study population consisted of 29 male and 21 female individuals. The following were their mean scores. Males averaged: pFAT = 19% (AVG = 20.0%); VO2MAX = 41.0 (AVG = 42.5); ME = 37.0 (AVG = 28.5); MS = 125.0 (AVG = 86.5); FL = 5.2 (AVG = 1.4); Females averaged: pFAT = 28.0% (AVG = 26.5%); VO2MAX (AVG = 34.0); ME = 27.0 (AVG = 21.0); MS = 83.0 (AVG = 76.5); FL = 4.5 (AVG = 3.4). CONCLUSION: These baseline data suggest the study population of air medical flight crew was physically fit compared to the average American adult.<p /><p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="1067-991X",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}