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FFG 02
23rd Mar 2010, 03:42
Hot off the press...28yrs later...

Qantas pilot kept flying with urge to crash (http://www.theage.com.au/travel/travel-news/qantas-kept-sick-pilot-in-the-sky-20100322-qr9t.html)


Qantas kept sick pilot in the sky
PAUL BIBBY
March 23, 2010

A MENTALLY ill Qantas pilot was allowed to continue flying passenger jets for nearly three years despite repeatedly complaining of his urges to crash the planes he was flying.

Bryan Arthur Griffin was a pilot with Qantas until 1982 when he resigned with severe obsessive compulsive disorder, anxiety and depression.

Evidence tendered as part of a worker's compensation claim showed that several times between 1979 and 1982 he struggled to resist an overwhelming urge to switch off his plane's engines. Mr Griffin said in the commission that his condition was made worse by continuing to work for the airline. His claim was upheld.

The Workers Compensation Commission heard that while running through an emergency procedure on a flight to Singapore, Mr Griffin's hand ''involuntarily moved towards the start levers''. He was forced to ''immobilise his left arm in order not to act on the compulsion''.

''He left the flight deck and, once he felt calm enough, returned to his seat.''

After informing his colleagues of these urges, Mr Griffin was examined by several doctors but ultimately declared fit to fly.

But the commission heard that Mr Griffin's disorder worsened over the ensuing months, including an urge to scream and cry, ignoring instructions, repeatedly missing radio and altitude calls, and repeated urges to crash the aircraft.

Mr Griffin saw and was treated by numerous doctors and psychiatrists and given extended leave to recuperate, but again allowed to return to the cockpit. Several times he expressed the opinion that he was fit to fly.

A report from Mr Griffin's psychiatrist said Qantas had failed to fully understand Mr Griffin's serious psychiatric problem or to consider ''the danger which you brought to passengers flying with you and the public generally, should you have crashed an aircraft".

The report said Mr Griffin should have been medically retired at the time of his acute problems. Qantas declined to comment on the evidence when contacted yesterday, saying only it was ''considering our options in terms of appealing this decision''.

The presidential member of the commission who heard the claim, Bill Roche, found Mr Griffin's condition had been exacerbated by continuing to work for Qantas. He ordered the airline to pay compensation for loss of earnings, medical expenses and legal costs.

''The evidence is overwhelmingly to the effect that Mr Griffin's obsessive compulsive disorder and anxiety spectrum symptoms deteriorated between November 1979 and November 1981 and that that deterioration occurred because he continued to perform flying duties for Qantas.''

Qantas was ordered to pay him about $160,000 plus medical and legal costs.

blueloo
23rd Mar 2010, 03:45
Hasnt this story been recycled at least 5 times in the last ten years? (How many times in 28yrs?)

This bloke has been seeking publicity for ages now. His website pops up over and over again. This is not new. Clearly they had a slow news day and finally decided to pop the story in again.

3 Holer
23rd Mar 2010, 06:10
Recycled AT LEAST 5 times.

I hear the sound of a padlock approaching.......click,click.....click,click :bored:

JulieFlyGal
23rd Mar 2010, 06:18
How did this guy ever get through the psychometric testing, I wonder? Isn't this the reason why airlines do such tests?

Brian Abraham
23rd Mar 2010, 06:24
Julie, such maladies can strike out of the blue. You MAY be able to detect propensity, but not necessarily. Same, same heart attack, cancer, or any other affliction.

ditch handle
23rd Mar 2010, 06:25
Julieflygal,

had it not occurred to you that perhaps he developed a mental illness after he became employed?

Boomerang
23rd Mar 2010, 06:28
Psychometric is not the same as psychiatric.

Psychometric testing tries to establish if you have the skills which complement the job. At least that is my basic understanding.

mrdeux
23rd Mar 2010, 06:32
I thought he was sent off to see the appropriate doctors and they recleared him to fly. Sounds like someone who was angling for a medical retirement, and the docs didn't agree.

Brutus
23rd Mar 2010, 06:32
If the event described occurred in 1982 and given how desperately slow promotions were in the 70's, it is reasonable to assume said aviator was employed in the (late?) 60's.

Was "psychometric" even a word then? Certainly CRM wasn't.....:}

tail wheel
23rd Mar 2010, 07:25
Very true. And I'd prefer we don't have a thread to encourage the guy to again try to register on PPRuNe.

Much Ado
23rd Mar 2010, 07:26
Yup - that pretty well covers it.