New York Post

Sadly, the skies really are blue

Pilots secretly depressed

- By YARON STEINBUCH

Thousands of commercial pilots worldwide are likely clinically depressed — some even suicidal — but don’t seek treatment for fear of being grounded and losing their wings, according to a new study.

The Harvard study was conducted in the wake of the 2015 Germanwing­s tragedy in the French Alps, in which a mentally ill co-pilot deliberate­ly crashed his plane, killing himself and 149 others.

Researcher­s found that 426 of 3,278 pilots surveyed last year — about 13 percent — were likely suffering from depression.

Seventy-five pilots reported having suicidal or self-destructiv­e thoughts within two weeks of taking the survey, according to the study, published Wednesday in Environmen­tal Health.

Using those numbers, researcher­s estimated that about 18,000 pilots are depressed and 5,600 have been suicidal, out of the roughly 140,000 flying worldwide — half of whom fly in the United States.

Airline pilots may be grounded if they report experienci­ng depression, depending on whether or not they are being treated, according to the study’s lead author, Alex Wu.

“That is a strong disincenti­ve [to report], if that directly influences their career,” he said, according to Boston.com.

“Underrepor­ting of mental-health symptoms and diagnoses is probable among airline pilots due to the public stigma of mental illness and fear among pilots of being grounded,” the study says.

Despite the findings, public confidence in airline pilots should not take a hit, the authors said.

“Flying is safe and this study doesn’t change that,” senior study author Joseph G. Allen told the LA Times.

The Federal Aviation Administra­tion has not called for routine psychologi­cal evaluation­s, saying there is no proof it would improve safety, CBS News reported.

But a US advisory panel has recently called for heightened measures to spot and treat mentally ill pilots to prevent the kind of breakdowns that led to the Germanwing­s disaster, a source told The Washington Post.

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