Hi all,
I am sure this will spark some controversy... if it gets out of hand, I will pull it myself... but I wanted to know what some of your thoughts are as I read a story in this AM's news.
First, I read the story located at:
http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/O/ ... TE=DEFAULT
Basically it's the story of the death of Vicki Van Meter... a girl not much younger than I am. She committed suicide and was said to have suffered from depression.
She was a girl who, in her youth, broke some flying records for being the youngest to fly (with an instructor) on various long-distance flights. Now, this isn't a debate about the validity of such "records" with the tragedy of jessica DuBroff still in many of our minds. I merely brought it in because aviation played a significant role in her life.
The article states that she opposed medication for her depression... no doubt due in part to the fact that the FAA will rarely approve medical certificates for people taking anti-depressants.
With all the clinical data that's now out there that positively supports depression treatment with medications, why hasn't the FAA revisited this issue?
What troubles me is the amount of pilots that are potentially suffering from depression but will not seek treatment or disclose it due to the ramifications to their career. Surely this is an issue with the amount of stress the industry has placed on pilots in recent years... pensions being taken away, increased work hours, pay cuts, cuts in benefits, layoffs, furloughs... the list goes on and on.
So what happens? Pilots go untreated to save their jobs and suffer with it, or self-medicate with alcohol... both alternatives that I would say are far worse than putting someone on a mild anti-depressant.
It gets to me because I have seen a lot of former classmates of mine "just give up" on aviation because of this issue... and others who are "sticking it out" in the hope that they'll get better on their own or the circumstances get better.
Thoughts anyone?