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ARTICLE |

Should pilots still fly after 60?

Phil Gunby
JAMA. 1979;242(11):1120. doi:10.1001/jama.1979.03300110004002.
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ABSTRACT

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has a cockpit controversy on its hands.

An agency rule prohibiting persons who are 60 years of age or older from serving as airline pilots has been in effect since 1960. Now the rule is coming under fire from Congress and the courts as being discriminatory.

To try to resolve the question, the FAA has impaneled a group of experts from medicine and other disciplines to review what the scientific literature has to say about older pilots and safety. The panel, which meets in Denver in October, also will gather data on:

  • Physiological and psychological changes in the aging process that might have subtle effects on pilot performance, how these might be identified, and what effect combinations of such changes might have.

  • Any medical problems that should be watched for in older fliers.

  • How, if the age-60 rule is held invalid, to predict

a pilot's

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