Toronto Star

FEAR OF FLYING

Anxiety related to feeling of loss of control, which recent crashes exacerbate

- SHERYL UBELACKER

Experts offer coping tips amid fresh bouts of anxiety about taking to the skies in wake of crash,

For many people with a fear of flying, Sunday’s deadly Ethiopian Airlines crash may have triggered fresh bouts of anxiety about taking to the skies in the future, especially as the tragedy came less than five months after the same model of aircraft plunged into the ocean off Indonesia, also killing all on board.

TV and newspaper images of the African crash site, coupled with an outpouring of comments on social media, can exacerbate those fears for both children and adults, say experts.

In fact, some airlines have been dealing with nervous passengers booked for flights on the same model — Boeing’s 737 Max 8 — seeking to switch their tickets to another type of aircraft. That comes amid a growing number of countries ordering that the aircraft be grounded while the Ethiopian Airlines crash that killed all 157 passengers and crew is investigat­ed.

“If you see that an airplane has crashed recently and you’re going on an airplane in a few days from now, your brain does the math and it basically says ‘Oh, if it happened to them, it can happen to me,’ ” said Ian Shulman, a psychologi­st who specialize­s in phobias, including fear of flying.

“It just amplifies the appearance that it’s happening all the time,” he said, despite the fact that flying is considered among the safest forms of travel. In 2017, for instance, there were no fatal passenger airline accidents worldwide.

Anxiety about flying is often related to feelings of loss of control, and for some the claustroph­obic discomfort of being trapped inside an object hurtling through the atmosphere with no way to escape.

While travelling in a vehicle on a highway is statistica­lly far more perilous than flying in a commercial aircraft, people know they can roll down the window for air or pull off at the next exit if they feel nervous, Shulman said Tuesday from Oakville, where he practises.

“When we fly, we’re not able to have those same opportunit­ies … So it takes us out of that place where we believe that we are in control,” he said. “I think that’s a huge element to the fear.”

Shulman advises people to pull back from that kind of thinking and to realize that “because we think something might happen, it doesn’t mean that it will happen.”

Parents can reassure a child or teen that aircraft crashes are extremely rare, said Madison Aitken, a clinical psychologi­st at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health in Toronto, adding that they might encourage their young travellers to focus on the destinatio­n and the fun activities they can engage in once they’ve arrived.

There are a number of programs in Canada that provide help to people who are nervous or phobic about air travel, including a weekend course in the spring and fall offered by Shulman, called Afraid to Fly.

The two-day course helps participan­ts better understand their fears, discusses coping strategies, and includes having a commercial pilot come to the Oakville clinic to answer their questions about aircraft and flight.

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