4.3 Article

Contributions of Hypoxia-Awareness Training to the Familiarization of Personal Symptoms for Occupational Safety in the Flight Environment

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18062904

Keywords

hypoxia; aviation medicine; hypoxia-awareness training; altitude chamber

Funding

  1. Kaohsiung Armed Forces General Hospital, Gangshan Branch, Taiwan [KAFGHGB-107-02]

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This study aimed to compare inflight hypoxia symptoms with those experienced during training, finding that hypoxia symptoms appeared both during inflight events and training. The results suggest that the fading of individual memory highlights the continued need for hypoxia awareness training.
Hypoxia remains a flight-safety issue in terms of aviation medicine. Hypoxia-awareness training has been used to help aircrew members recognize personal hypoxia symptoms. There is still no study, as yet, to establish the association of within-subject data between inflight hypoxia events and the altitude chamber. The main purpose of our study was to use paired subjects' data on inflight hypoxia symptoms compared with those experienced during training. A questionnaire was developed to obtain information on military aircrew members in 2018. Among 341 subjects, 46 (13.49%) suffered from inflight hypoxia. The majority of the subjects detected ongoing inflight hypoxia on the basis of their previous experience with personal hypoxia symptoms or sensations in previous chamber flights. Of the top five hypoxia symptoms, the data revealed that hot flashes, poor concentration, and impaired cognitive function appeared both during the inflight events and during the hypoxia-awareness training. The occurrence rate of hypoxia symptoms was found to not be significantly different between the in-flight events and the past chamber flights through an analysis of within-subject data. Because the individual memory had faded away over time, fresher hypoxia awareness training is still mandatory and valuable to recall personal hypoxia experience for military aircrew members.

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