PapernScissors wrote:Where have we seen credible reports of non-physicians evaluating pilot medicals of any class, and making substantive decisions on either special issuance or denial? I don't recall any mention of non-physiciansmaking those decisions in any article I've read in AOPA or EAA 'zines, or in any aviation 'zine. I am a frequent reader of NTSB accident reports I pull from the NTSB's aviation DB. What I generally see are reports of pilots who lied on their FAA Medicals, theb successfully hid serious health issues (and prescribed, OTC, and illegal drugs on from the AME or Basic Med physiciam)... then kill themselves & others in an aircraft accident.
Please link all these reports where medical was the primary cause
I remember reading of some pilots who got taken to court for not telling the FAA about some VA benefits that would have made them unable to get a medical, what seems to have gotten skipped in that print was that they all were already end of career, and their medical “conditions” never surfaced during any routine exams by a AME, never were noticed during their checkrides every 6 months, never noticed by their co pilots or FO, or FA, gate crew, never even came up off duty to the point anyone called HR. Sounds like the FAA saved the flying public from...well I’m not sure, but I’m sure high 5s were abound in OKC after the article came out.
Also per your doc question, I’d say every decision out of OKC or DC, when those doctors label someone with something it’s not a real medical dx, nor can they be held liable for malpractice, so they might be a MD, but they arnt acting in that capacity anymore than a pilot who’s on a flight but not responsible for it.
Being a federal employee is a privilege, just as being a airman, I’m responsible if I screw up in that capacity, I put my license on the line for any and every call I make, so should the folks at OKC per their MD license.
But the crux of the question was the accident rate by pilots medical class. I just don’t see how taking the government out of medicine in this context would be anything but good, make a list of what a airman will have to do, let a primary care doc sign off if it can be done, with his MD and malpractice on the line, I’d even be cool with having pilots have to have a primary care doc, even if it was just for a yearly checkup. Having the ultimate call be made by the practitioner who has hands on the Pt and has been seeing the Pt for a long time, and UNLIKE the FAA actually has skin in the game, that just makes obvious sense.

