Ask Captain Lim ~ All about Aviation

Saturday, 05 July 2008
Home arrow Aptitude Tests arrow Does color deficiency affect a pilot's career?
Saturday, 05 July 2008
Main Menu
Home
Welcome
Ask Me
Forum
Disclaimer
Privacy
Search
Links
OnLine Stores
Pilot Career
Becoming a Pilot
Female Pilots
Education
Medical Examination
Eyesight
Height
Age
Interviewing Process
Aptitude Tests
Flight Simulator
Training
Technical Questions
Professional Pilot
General
Licenses & Ratings
A320 Training Videos
Salary
Job Opportunities
Flying
Air Travel
Airways
Ditching
Dr JB Lim's Corner
Emergencies
ETOPS
Fear of Flying
Flying on the Boeing 777
Flying the Plane
Medical
Profession
Aviation
Airlines
Airplanes
Airports
Air Crash
Air Crash Investigations
Air Safety
Humor
B777 Photo/Routes/Seats
Video
Stories, Truths & Myths
Weather
Air Turbulence
Contrails
Crosswinds
Icings
Lightnings
Night Flights
Thunderstorms
Windshears

Click Here for Searches on Weather News & Forecast

Google
 


Does color deficiency affect a pilot's career?

Written by Capt Lim, on 04-03-2008

Published in : Pilot Career, Medical Examination


Hi Captain Lim,

I have a slight color deficiency and I have gone to see a specialist. I have just taken a Farnsworth100 Hue Test yesterday and I am still waiting for the results.

The doctor told me that he would advise against pursuing a career as a pilot. He based it on the fact that an airline could hire someone without a deficiency, so why hire me? What I would like to know is, being color deficient, affect the job of a pilot? Has there been any accidents caused by a color-deficient pilot? Some pilots today are color deficient without even knowing that they are and still fly pretty well. Am I right?   -

Kit

Hi Kit, 

Before I answer your question, let me elaborate a little bit on what is color blindness.  Some aspiring pilots are unaware that they are colorblind until they undertake a medical examination, usually from a pilot recruitment procedure.  This news can be quite traumatic to one whose lifelong experience is to be a commercial pilot.

What then is color blindness?   Will this defect get worse?   Can this medical problem be cured?

Color blindness can either be inherited or acquired.   Color deficient people tend to confuse some colors or may totally miss others.  A colorblind person actually sees only black, white and shade of gray.   Man has a higher prevalence of color deficiencies (about 8 % or 11 million US males) whereas females have less color blindness problems (about 2 % or 1.4 million women).

Sometimes the use of certain medication has been associated with color confusion, notably the color blue and yellow.  Exposure to industrial toxins, especially to crop duster pilots, aging and high blood pressure are contributory causes to those acquired color deficiencies problems.

FAA medical check emphasized more on the red/green tests because of potential concern for those individuals misinterpreting the light signals on runways, taxi, VASI lights and aircraft position lights.

Sometime a borderline candidate might not pass a FAA test yet pass a proper administered test given under defined lightings conditions.   This standard differs from a military pilots and commercial pilots.

The Guidelines for Medical Examiners states "If an applicant meet the color vision standard ... but is otherwise qualified, the examiner may issue a medical certificate bearing the limitation ‘Not valid for night flying or by color signal control'.

Can color blindness be cured?   Well, if it is inherited, it may be treated, but if it is acquired, it may be, depending on changing of the medications or totally eliminating direct contact with the toxins. 

So, if you are color blind, you may not pass the medical test for the initial commercial pilot training. As you know, the medical examination for airline entry is quite stringent as compared to other profession and recognition of colors is very important when flying in the air or taxiing on the ground. 

I am not sure as to whether a color deficient pilot has caused any accidents yet. Anyway, he would have been screened out in the regular aircrew medical examinations before he could have caused any untoward accidents.


Save this to del.icio.us

Users' Comments  RSS feed comment
 
 

No comment posted

Add your comment



mXcomment 1.0.5 © 2007-2008 - visualclinic.fr
License Creative Commons - Some rights reserved
 
< Prev   Next >

Free Page Rank Tool

Latest Comments
A successful SIA Cadet Pilot...
Sources for Aptitude Test
"My advice to aspiring candidates is -...
01/07/08 08:45 More...
By Ng Liang Quan

A successful aspiring pilot...
What's 33x45
Hi there, May I ask what's...
01/07/08 08:17 More...
By Ng Liang Quan

Is it possible for a...
Further elaboration
Well, other airline one can consider...
01/07/08 04:54 More...
By FO Chang

Did the pilots fall asleep?
AIR INDIA?....
I'm flying Air. India next month...from...
01/07/08 00:58 More...
By Deborah Hofsoy

Did the pilots fall asleep?
Another such incident in air india
Dear Captain Lim Did the air...
27/06/08 17:43 More...
By farook

© 2008 Ask Captain Lim ~ All about Aviation
Joomla! is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL License.