Systematic Mental Health Care for Airline Pilots: Addressing Rare but Catastrophic Safety Outcomes
Zhaohui Su, Xue Yang, Chaojun Tong, Mehak Intizar, Junaid Ahmad, Dean McDonnell, Barry L. Bentley, Ali Cheshmehzangi, Jing‐Bao Nie, Chee H. Ng, Yu‐Tao XiangABSTRACT
Current understanding of mental health problems among aviation pilots remains limited. Pilots are exposed to distinctive occupational stressors, and when psychological distress occurs, they may be reluctant to disclose symptoms or seek timely assistance because of concerns about stigma, loss of income, licensing restrictions, or medical disqualification from flying. Pilot mental health is therefore not only an occupational health issue, but also a critical component of aviation safety governance. Although the vast majority of mental health conditions do not lead to flight safety events, in rare circumstances, severe psychological crises that remain unidentified or unsupported may result in catastrophic outcomes, including aircraft‐assisted pilot suicide. These tragic events underscore the potential safety implications of pilot mental health and highlight the urgent need for greater attention to this critical issue. This article argues that prevention should be centered on system‐level measures, including confidential peer support, carefully governed digital tools, destigmatized safety cultures, and harmonized data infrastructures.