
Published: October 21st 2009
Source: By JOAN LOWY (AP)
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WASHINGTON — Safety investigators
have sent government agencies a wake-up call about sleep apnea, a
disorder that's showing up in a wide range of transportation
accidents.
The National Transportation Safety Board said Tuesday that
commercial truck and bus drivers and merchant ship pilots should be
screened for sleep apnea. The board made similar recommendations for
airline pilots and train operators earlier this year.
In letters to the Coast Guard and the Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration, the board recommended requiring medical examiners to
question drivers and ship pilots about the disorder — which involves
disruptions in breathing during sleep — and to develop programs to
identify the problem.
Sleep apnea denies people the rest they need, and it has been found
to be a factor in incidents involving every transportation mode,
NTSB Chairman Deborah Hersman said in the letters.
The board has sent similar recommendations to the Federal Aviation
Administration and to local transit agencies across the country.
Among the incidents cited in the letters:
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In January 2008, a motorcoach
carrying passengers returning from a weekend ski trip went
too fast around a curve on a rural Utah highway. The bus
went careening down a mountainside, killing nine people and
injuring 43 others. The driver suffered from sleep apnea and
had trouble using a device to regulate his breathing while
sleeping in the days before the accident. |
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The same month, two go!
airlines pilots conked out for at least 18 minutes
during a midmorning flight from Honolulu to Hilo,
Hawaii, as their plane continued to cruise past its
destination and out to sea. Air traffic controllers were
finally able to raise the pilots, who turned the plane
around with its 40 passengers and landed it safely. The
captain was later diagnosed with sleep apnea. |
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A trolley train
crashed into another train in May 2008 in Newton,
Mass. Investigators said the driver probably fell
asleep because she suffered from sleep apnea, but it
could not be proved because she died. |
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In November 2001,
a train engineer drove through a stop warning in
Clarkston, Mich., striking another train and
killing two crew members. He was found to be a
very high risk for sleep apnea, but he had not
been diagnosed or treated. |
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In June 1995, a cruise ship maneuvering through Alaska's Inside Passage was grounded on a submerged but charted and marked rock by a pilot later diagnosed with sleep apnea. The ship was carrying about 2,200 people. |
A 2002 study that found 7 percent of adults
have at least a moderate form of the disorder,
but people often don't know they have it.
The motor carrier administration is already
considering a rule to tighten its standards for
medical certification of commercial drivers,
Transportation Department spokeswoman Sasha
Johnson said.
The FAA is also in the process of drafting new
rules to broadly address pilot fatigue and will
consider the board's recommendations,
spokeswoman Laura Brown said.
The Coast Guard is examining the recommendations
and will pursue possible safety strategies,
spokeswoman Lisa Novak said.
The letters noted the Federal Railroad
Administration is also working on drafting new
regulations to address the problem.
Mark Rosenker, a former NTSB acting chairman,
said the issue has long been a concern of the
board, but the go! airlines incident jarred
board members.
"Obviously when two pilots fall asleep in the
cockpit and they miss their stop, that triggers
a lot of interest at NTSB," Rosenker said.
On the Net:
National Transportation Safety Board:
http://www.ntsb.gov

