Flight attendant fatigue, recommendation II : flight attendant work/rest patterns, alertness, and performance assessment
(Book - Regular Print)

Book Cover
Average Rating
Published
Washington, D.C. : Federal Aviation Administration, Office of Aerospace Medicine, 2010.
Physical Desc
v, 12 pages : illustrations ; 28 cm
Status
Embry Riddle Aero University - ASASA - Aviation Safety & Security Archives
DOT/FAA/AM-10/22
1 available

More Details

Published
Washington, D.C. : Federal Aviation Administration, Office of Aerospace Medicine, 2010.
Format
Book - Regular Print
Language
English

Notes

General Note
Cover title.
General Note
"Work was accomplished under approved task AM-AHR521."--Report documentation page.
General Note
"December 2010."
General Note
"DOT/FAA/AM-10/22."
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
Type of Report an Period Covered
Final report.
Description
"Impaired performance induced by fatigue may compromise safety in commercial aviation. Given the direct role flight attendants play in passenger safety, the U.S. Congress ordered a comprehensive examination of fatigue in cabin crew, including a field study of actual flight operations. This report provides an overview of the field study results, focusing on objective measures of sleep patterns and neurocognitive performance (Psychomotor Vigilance Test, PVT) over a 3-4 week period in 202 U.S.-based flight attendants of all seniority levels working for network, low-cost, and regional carriers embarking on domestic and international flight operations. On average, flight attendants slept 6.3 hr on days off and 5.7 hr on work days, fell asleep 29 min after going to bed, awoke four times per sleep episode, and spent 77% of each episode actually sleeping. After controlling for reserve status, gender, and age, junior-level flight attendants had the shortest sleep latencies on their days off. Those working international operations slept significantly less (4.9 hr vs. 5.9 hr) and less efficiently (75% vs. 79%), compared with their colleagues in domestic operations. All flight attendants exhibited significant impairments during prework PVT tests when compared to their own optimum baseline performance. Across the workday, regional flight attendants committed fewer premature PVT responses, junior-level participants produced significantly higher post-work reaction times, and those working international flights produced better pre-work reaction times but had a greater increase in lapses. These objective data are consistent with other shift work research and echo subjective survey findings across the U.S. flight attendant community. Additional planned analyses of this dataset may identify the precise operational variables that contribute to fatigue in cabin crew."--Report documentation page.
Additional Physical Form
Also available online in PDF from the Aerospace Medicine Technical Reports Web site.
Funding Information
Sponsored by the Federal Aviation Administration, Office of Aerospace Medicine; performed by the Federal Aviation Administration, Civil Aerospace Medical Institute and the Institutes for Behavior Resources.

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Citations

APA Citation, 7th Edition (style guide)

Roma, P. G., Mallis, M. M., Hursh, S. R., Mead, A. M., & Nesthus, T. E. (2010). Flight attendant fatigue, recommendation II: flight attendant work/rest patterns, alertness, and performance assessment . Federal Aviation Administration, Office of Aerospace Medicine.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Peter G. Roma et al.. 2010. Flight Attendant Fatigue, Recommendation II: Flight Attendant Work/rest Patterns, Alertness, and Performance Assessment. Federal Aviation Administration, Office of Aerospace Medicine.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Peter G. Roma et al.. Flight Attendant Fatigue, Recommendation II: Flight Attendant Work/rest Patterns, Alertness, and Performance Assessment Federal Aviation Administration, Office of Aerospace Medicine, 2010.

MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)

Roma, Peter G., et al. Flight Attendant Fatigue, Recommendation II: Flight Attendant Work/rest Patterns, Alertness, and Performance Assessment Federal Aviation Administration, Office of Aerospace Medicine, 2010.

Note! Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy. Citation formats are based on standards as of August 2021.

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