Page 182 - PPL - engelsk - Air Law and Human Performance
P. 182

Human Performance


                Especially if you have no horizon or something to focus your gaze on outside the

                plane, you can get motion sickness. Be careful when reading maps.


                If you feel the beginnings of discomfort, it is good to focus on something distant,

                because then you let the visual input drown out the signals coming from the

                balance organ.

                It is not recommended that you as a pilot use medication for motion sickness,

                as  medications  dull  the  senses  (your  passengers  are  welcome  to  use  them,

                however).


                Anxiety and stress as well as the use of alcohol are reinforcing factors in the

                onset of motion sickness.



                If  you  have  a  passenger  who  is  suffering  from  motion  sickness,  you  should

                reassure them, provide fresh air, fly as calmly as possible and give them a bag

                to vomit into. Just letting the airsick person know that there is a safe place to

                vomit can be reassuring.


                Tell them where the vomit bag is during the briefing.




                2.6.6.6    SCUBA diving

                Scuba diving is diving with breathing equipment that supplies the diver with air

                corresponding to the ambient pressure.


                Such diving carries a risk of decompression sickness, which is why divers learn

                specific ascent procedures if they have been to greater depths.

                Nitrogen is found in the air we breathe (in the air around us and in our diving

                tanks).


                During diving, large amounts of nitrogen are absorbed into the body's tissues.

                This is because the diver breathes at a pressure that is higher than at sea level.

                The amount of dissolved nitrogen depends on the depth of the dive and the

                time  the  dive  lasts.  The  deeper  and  longer  the  dive,  the  more  nitrogen  is

                absorbed into the body.


            Flight Theory PPL(A)(UL)/LAPL             Henning Andersen, Midtjysk Flyveskole© 2025          182
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