Here's a fun fact. In the US, if you would like to fly a plane, and you have undiagnosed and thus untreated ADHD, no problemo.
But if you do end up taking stimulant medication for ADHD, that's not allowed. So unfortunately sometimes (rather often with the FAA) it's better not to ask questions you don't want the answer to.
The amount of undiagnosed ADHD (and secretly treated anxiety and depression, for that matter) in the aviation industry is off the charts. I have a lot of respect for most of the FAA, which is professional, reasonable, and evidence-based. But the FAA aeromedical division is a joke. They're bullies with a stone-age mentality about treatments and medications that have been accepted for decades.
I might agree in principle, but aviation pilots are glorified bus/truck drivers. It's the farthest thing from a job that might cater to a typical "ADHD" skills profile. What you really want in that role is people who can be dependable without relying on intoxicating substances that might have weird side effects.
There is a large adult population with undiagnosed and untreated ADHD. A generation ago that population was even higher. A bunch of them are pilots.
So then the question is, if in a professional pilot and I think I might have ADHD, do I follow up on that hunch? Of course not, because a diagnosis would cost me my career.
There’s good research to show that stimulants reduce the rate of car crashes in people with ADHD. I have no doubt that if we encouraged pilots to seek ADHD treatment, it would improve safety.
IMO the diagnoses that should exclude someone from flying are those that could cause them to become suddenly incapacitated. For everything else, we can just test whether someone can safely fly an airplane, which we already regularly do for pilots.
This is the same fallacy that always comes up. People are already flying this way!
What is the difference between someone with ADHD who passed their pilot lessons but doesn't have a diagnosis and is not taking medication vs someone with ADHD who is getting help?
Why is this an aeromedical issue and not a certification issue? What is the training and testing for if not to confirm that someone has the capability to successfully fly a plane?
Hell, taking medication or not, if you have had a diagnosis in the past (and didn't lie on your medical history), merely having current symptoms is grounds for your FAA medical certificate being deferred.
The fact that somebody can be completely undiagnosed, untreated, and potentially self-medicated, will get their medical certificate issued while those seeking treatment and function at the same level as their peers get deferred is madness. I completely understand concern being warranted, given a majority of airline accidents can, unfortunately, be attributed to pilot error, but it shows a maddening lack of understanding of the condition by the agency. Especially when their justification for telling AME's to defer individuals actively taking ADHD medication has nothing to do with the condition itself, but some bullshit that it actively increases cognitive deficits? Give me a break, I'd rather they just be honest, "we don't trust people who need stimulants to properly follow routine checklist procedures that are the bread and butter of a commercial pilot's job."
> but some bullshit that it actively increases cognitive deficits?
It doesn't look like obvious "bullshit". A number of ADHD medications are well-known intoxicating substances; it's not unfathomable that they might induce some kind of cognitive or behavioral impairment (not necessarily the same kind one might get diagnosed for, either).
Sure, but do you really want people flying a plane when their performance might depend on how they happen to react to that kind of medication? It's just one more thing that can go wrong in so many ways. And it's not like flying airline routes is a job that would even appeal to the typical ADHD-diagnosed person - like GP said, its "bread and butter" is sticking to boring checklists. There might be some silly glamorous aspect to it but that's not a good reason why one should want to be a pilot in the first place.
As it stands, many medical conditions that require maintenance medication that may cause side-effects you wouldn't want when you're airbore don't disqualify you from being a pilot. The entire point of the FAA medical examination isn't to make sure you are a perfect specimen of human health and have no issues whatsoever, that would disqualify a hell of a lot of pilots from flying.
> And it's not like flying airline routes is a job that would even appeal to the typical ADHD-diagnosed person - like you said, its "bread and butter" is sticking to boring checklists.
My ADHD diagnosis is not a reflection of my personality, it's a chemical imbalance of my brain that prevents things non-ADHD individuals would consider rewarding from feeling that way to me. I fucking love spending hours flying an A320 around in Flight Simulator, and I literally go through most of the same checklist items that commercial pilots do in a game, just to fly some virtual cargo around in return for imaginary internet money on FSAirlines.
Do I want to be a commercial pilot? No, I've got a pretty good job as a SWE/SRE that requires substantially less bullshit, and the vision in my left eye can't be corrected enough to pass a FAA ME for a commercial pilots license anyway. But I will be absolutely damned if I let somebody say it wouldn't appeal to me anyway just because I have ADHD - like I don't have enough bullshit checklist work to go through in any other job.
The military used to give pilots straight up meth. They still do give their pilots performance enhancing drugs. How many pilots fly drunk? Why are the checklists not done and confirmed digitally instead of relying on fallible human pilots, regardless of i how much Adderall they're on?
If this were really about safety, there is so much other actionable low hanging fruit to make things safer. Looking at the TSA and ask the security theater there. It's not surprising.
But if you do end up taking stimulant medication for ADHD, that's not allowed. So unfortunately sometimes (rather often with the FAA) it's better not to ask questions you don't want the answer to.