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Church
of Scientology of Canberra presents:

The Associated Press
Published: April 2, 2010
WASHINGTON -
Pilots
now can take antidepressants on job

The
government is lifting a 70-year-old ban on letting pilots fly while on
antidepressants, citing improvements in the drugs and an unforeseen
side effect of the restriction: Depressed pilots kept flying but just
kept their conditions secret.
"Our concern is that they haven't necessarily been candid," Federal
Aviation Administrator Randy Babbitt told reporters in a conference
call.
The change in policy, which includes a degree of amnesty for pilots who
lied about their diagnosis and treatment on medical certification
forms, is aimed in part at cluing the government in on how many pilots
suffer from a disease whose symptoms can include thoughts of suicide,
FAA officials said.
The National Institute of Mental Health estimates that about 9.5
percent of people 18 and older suffer from a mood disorder. A 2009
study by Columbia University showed that as many as 10 percent of
Americans were taking antidepressants. FAA officials assume the
percentage is about the same among pilots.
But the agency has no hard numbers because the ban gave pilots a
disincentive to report depression or treatment for it. Under the ban,
airline and other pilots who suspected they were depressed but wanted
or financially needed to fly generally faced a choice: seek no
medication for treatment, because doing so would disqualify them, or
self-medicate and lie about it on a required medical certification form
- a federal crime. Neither, Babbitt said, is acceptable.
"We need to change the culture and remove the stigma associated with
depression," Babbitt said. "Pilots should be able to get the medical
treatment they need so they can safely perform their duties."
Under the new policy, pilots who take one of four antidepressants -
Prozac, Zoloft, Celexa or Lexapro - or their generic equivalents will
be allowed to fly if they have been successfully treated by those
medications for a year without side effects that could pose a safety
hazard in the cockpit. The antidepressants are classified as SSRIs,
which help regulate mood.
The ban had endured because earlier generations of antidepressants
caused concerns about side effects, such as drowsiness and seizures,
Babbitt said. But a panel of medical experts for the FAA found during
two years of research that newer versions don't cause side effects in
everyone. When they do occur, they tend to subside in time.
In addition, the FAA will grant a sort of amnesty for pilots who have
kept their treatment a secret. The agency will not take civil
enforcement action against pilots who, within six months, disclose
their diagnoses of depression and treatment.
Technically, the new policy would not protect pilots who lied about the
issue from criminal prosecution, a spokesman for the agency said. But
the inspector general of the Department of Transportation has said that
prosecution would only be sought in extraordinary cases, such as when
other criminal conduct was involved, according to Les Dorr, spokesman
for the FAA.
Several labor unions representing aircraft owners, pilots and crews had
urged the government to lift the ban, and the Air Travelers Association
does not object, according to its president, David Stempler. The Army,
the Civil Aviation Authority of Australia and Transport Canada already
allow some pilots to fly who are using antidepressant medications.
But others say that lying on a federal form for any reason should
disqualify would-be pilots.
"The FAA, by essentially granting amnesty to thousands of pilots who
suffer from mental illnesses, and lied about those illnesses, is
rewarding dishonesty and in so doing making our skies less safe," said
Joseph Gutheinz Jr. a former commercial pilot and government
investigator who teaches about aviation security and safety issues at
the University of Phoenix.
A team of psychiatrists and aviation medical examiners will help the
agency monitor pilots under the new policy, modeled on a program
established 40 years ago to assess and treat pilots suffering from
alcohol and drug abuse issues, the FAA said.
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