Are you required to disclose medical conditions to your flight instructor?
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When talking with a local flight school about my interest in starting training, I started asking questions about how the AME process works. The flight instructor then asked me if I had any specific medical issues. Are you required to disclose any health information to your flight instructor? What about if the issue(s) could be disqualifying? Would you get in trouble for lying to the instructor (to avoid judgement or maintain privacy) but NOT lying during the AME?
faa-regulations medical flight-school
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up vote
24
down vote
favorite
When talking with a local flight school about my interest in starting training, I started asking questions about how the AME process works. The flight instructor then asked me if I had any specific medical issues. Are you required to disclose any health information to your flight instructor? What about if the issue(s) could be disqualifying? Would you get in trouble for lying to the instructor (to avoid judgement or maintain privacy) but NOT lying during the AME?
faa-regulations medical flight-school
add a comment |
up vote
24
down vote
favorite
up vote
24
down vote
favorite
When talking with a local flight school about my interest in starting training, I started asking questions about how the AME process works. The flight instructor then asked me if I had any specific medical issues. Are you required to disclose any health information to your flight instructor? What about if the issue(s) could be disqualifying? Would you get in trouble for lying to the instructor (to avoid judgement or maintain privacy) but NOT lying during the AME?
faa-regulations medical flight-school
When talking with a local flight school about my interest in starting training, I started asking questions about how the AME process works. The flight instructor then asked me if I had any specific medical issues. Are you required to disclose any health information to your flight instructor? What about if the issue(s) could be disqualifying? Would you get in trouble for lying to the instructor (to avoid judgement or maintain privacy) but NOT lying during the AME?
faa-regulations medical flight-school
faa-regulations medical flight-school
edited Nov 28 at 13:41
asked Nov 27 at 14:27
Programmer
25318
25318
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add a comment |
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
up vote
55
down vote
accepted
When it comes to the AME, you must disclose everything fully and completely. Failure to do so may void any license and insurance and expose you to extraordinary civil and criminal risk.
When it comes to your flight instructor, who is not a medical professional, you do not need to disclose the specifics of your situation. Saying, "I have concerns about passing a Class III Medical Exam due to certain conditions" is sufficient, and is not the same thing as lying. Do not claim you are healthy when you know you are not.
Your instructor may decide not to continue training until a physical is passed, or he may decide just to be a little extra vigilant during training, and delay certain elements or maneuvers depending on the information you choose to provide.
For example: If you choose to disclose vertigo problems, he may avoid steep turns until medical clearance. If you choose to disclose vision issues, he may avoid night-flight.
Regardless, you will need a medical before your first solo flight.
Do not lie to your instructor, but that is not the same thing as disclosing full details of your health with a non-medic.
3
Presumably, you're risking your flight instructor's life along with your own when you are flying together. And their plane, their insurance, their livelihood.. You don't owe them details of your condition, but you should think hard about what you're embarking on here..
– George M
Nov 28 at 17:32
Wouldn't it be also wise to disclose things that can kill you like "I have nuts allergy" or treatments that can kill you in case of emergency?
– Alexei Levenkov
Nov 28 at 20:07
1
Wise? Yes. Required? No. The question is about what is required.
– abelenky
Nov 28 at 20:27
2
@abelenky I believe that instructor is NOT required to train someone if he is not sure it is safe. Actually, as far as I understand, he is required not to allow someone to fly if he has any safety concerns. Freedom not to disclose medical details comes with a price, if used.
– Mołot
Nov 29 at 13:15
1
@Molot: Did I even remotely suggest otherwise? I explicitly said the instructor may decide not to proceed with training. But the student is still not required to disclose medical details to a non-medic.
– abelenky
Nov 29 at 14:41
|
show 3 more comments
up vote
17
down vote
There's no legal or regulatory obligation to tell your instructor about medical conditions as others have said. There may be rare cases where there are insurance considerations the flight school must take into account, in which case they should explain that.
There's good reasons to be open, however:
- Not disclosing a medical condition could increase the risk to both you and your instructor, depending on what that is. The more the instructor knows about you the more they can look out for the specific issues a medical issue may raise
- Training works better if there is a rapport and trust between the instructor and student. Lying to an instructor is a breach of trust, and could damage the relationship.
Think of it this way: how would you like it if you were an instructor and found out a student wasn't telling you he/she was prone to panic attacks? And you found out on final approach when the student suddenly went rigid, or worse pulled back on the controls and put you both in a life threatening situation? You'd want to know so you could make an informed choice on whether to take that student on, and if you did you'd probably elect a different training regime, one with more gradual steps.
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
There is no obligation to disclose anything to your CFI, just your AME. That said, your CFI may have useful advice about common problems, if you're willing to talk about them, and they may suggest delaying relevant parts of your training until thosr problems are resolved by your AME.
If a CFI (or anyone besides your AME) asks a question you don't want to answer, then tell them that, rather than evading the question or lying (even if only by omission), and they should respect your privacy. Just knowing there's something they don't know is good enough.
If your flight school requires medical forms, then IMHO, find a new one. All they need to know is whether or not you have your medical certificate.
Flying clubs sometimes have more through medical questionnaires. Some are for insurance data collection, and others are for risk reduction.
– mongo
Nov 28 at 17:51
Some CFIs have more medical background than others, however they are not in a position to do any medical risk evaluation, as much as the FSDO inspectors might bug them for information on a student (when investigating).
– mongo
Nov 28 at 17:52
@mongo: I've rented from FBOs, flight schools and flying clubs, and none ever asked for anything other than my medical cert. No CFI ever asked me medical questions either, though I have asked them for advice on specific issues--as pilots who've dealt with the FAA longer than I have, not specifically as CFIs.
– Stephen Sprunk
Nov 28 at 18:11
I have first hand experience with several flying clubs, and some of them have rather extensive questionnaires. They don't ask you fine medical details, but one question which raised my eyebrows was whether one had received in-patient medical care in the last 10 years. My student was a mother at that club, and she thought the question was potentially discriminatory, as most women who are mothers have been an inpatient. The membership coordinator told me their insurance agent or underwriter asked that question. More common questions are on alcohol and drug treatment and criminal convictions.
– mongo
Nov 28 at 18:17
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up vote
3
down vote
At this stage, when you are just talking about maybe starting to learn to fly, this person is not acting as your flight instructor. He's just a person giving you information about a process. You aren't under any legal obligation to disclose anything to him.
On the other hand, flight instructors often have a decent knowledge of the medical requirements to fly, and might have been able to give you a good opinion on whether any particular condition is disqualifying.
At a later stage, when you are actually taking instruction, it's probably a bad idea to withhold useful information from your instructor. It is likely that a flight school will make you fill in a form which asks about medical conditions, and lying on that would be a very bad idea.
add a comment |
up vote
1
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The reason he asked that is because he thinks you asked an XY question, and thinks the "X" is "I have a medical problem that I fear might fail me on my medical". So he is asking only to answer your query, and he's not wasting time on the Y, and taking the shorter path to X. Not his first rodeo...
As such, he's listening for relevant medical concerns likely to fail you, i.e. That could affect your safety to fly. It would be an "overshare" to mention your excema, HIV status, enlarged prostate, well-managed cancer, eidetic memory, gluten allergy, or need for Viagra.
So answer the X: say why you think you'd have trouble with the medical.
You can always trot out the old "asking for a friend"... But then, expect to have an instructor who takes precautions against you having that problem in flight with him. Really, a lying relationship is not one you want to have in the cockpit of a plane.
1
I can positively say that the conversation did not go as you describe. The conversation was about requirements to get a pilot license, which included the AME. I asked about the "process" in general terms (where to take one, cost, ect...). He was the one who brought up the exam details where he then asked me the medical questions.
– Programmer
Nov 28 at 18:54
i wan't there, but I can't see how you would frame a question about the process without it opening the door to his query. It isn't really people's habit to give long general overviews, if they think there's a more easily answered, more specific question underneath it.
– Harper
Nov 28 at 20:48
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5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
55
down vote
accepted
When it comes to the AME, you must disclose everything fully and completely. Failure to do so may void any license and insurance and expose you to extraordinary civil and criminal risk.
When it comes to your flight instructor, who is not a medical professional, you do not need to disclose the specifics of your situation. Saying, "I have concerns about passing a Class III Medical Exam due to certain conditions" is sufficient, and is not the same thing as lying. Do not claim you are healthy when you know you are not.
Your instructor may decide not to continue training until a physical is passed, or he may decide just to be a little extra vigilant during training, and delay certain elements or maneuvers depending on the information you choose to provide.
For example: If you choose to disclose vertigo problems, he may avoid steep turns until medical clearance. If you choose to disclose vision issues, he may avoid night-flight.
Regardless, you will need a medical before your first solo flight.
Do not lie to your instructor, but that is not the same thing as disclosing full details of your health with a non-medic.
3
Presumably, you're risking your flight instructor's life along with your own when you are flying together. And their plane, their insurance, their livelihood.. You don't owe them details of your condition, but you should think hard about what you're embarking on here..
– George M
Nov 28 at 17:32
Wouldn't it be also wise to disclose things that can kill you like "I have nuts allergy" or treatments that can kill you in case of emergency?
– Alexei Levenkov
Nov 28 at 20:07
1
Wise? Yes. Required? No. The question is about what is required.
– abelenky
Nov 28 at 20:27
2
@abelenky I believe that instructor is NOT required to train someone if he is not sure it is safe. Actually, as far as I understand, he is required not to allow someone to fly if he has any safety concerns. Freedom not to disclose medical details comes with a price, if used.
– Mołot
Nov 29 at 13:15
1
@Molot: Did I even remotely suggest otherwise? I explicitly said the instructor may decide not to proceed with training. But the student is still not required to disclose medical details to a non-medic.
– abelenky
Nov 29 at 14:41
|
show 3 more comments
up vote
55
down vote
accepted
When it comes to the AME, you must disclose everything fully and completely. Failure to do so may void any license and insurance and expose you to extraordinary civil and criminal risk.
When it comes to your flight instructor, who is not a medical professional, you do not need to disclose the specifics of your situation. Saying, "I have concerns about passing a Class III Medical Exam due to certain conditions" is sufficient, and is not the same thing as lying. Do not claim you are healthy when you know you are not.
Your instructor may decide not to continue training until a physical is passed, or he may decide just to be a little extra vigilant during training, and delay certain elements or maneuvers depending on the information you choose to provide.
For example: If you choose to disclose vertigo problems, he may avoid steep turns until medical clearance. If you choose to disclose vision issues, he may avoid night-flight.
Regardless, you will need a medical before your first solo flight.
Do not lie to your instructor, but that is not the same thing as disclosing full details of your health with a non-medic.
3
Presumably, you're risking your flight instructor's life along with your own when you are flying together. And their plane, their insurance, their livelihood.. You don't owe them details of your condition, but you should think hard about what you're embarking on here..
– George M
Nov 28 at 17:32
Wouldn't it be also wise to disclose things that can kill you like "I have nuts allergy" or treatments that can kill you in case of emergency?
– Alexei Levenkov
Nov 28 at 20:07
1
Wise? Yes. Required? No. The question is about what is required.
– abelenky
Nov 28 at 20:27
2
@abelenky I believe that instructor is NOT required to train someone if he is not sure it is safe. Actually, as far as I understand, he is required not to allow someone to fly if he has any safety concerns. Freedom not to disclose medical details comes with a price, if used.
– Mołot
Nov 29 at 13:15
1
@Molot: Did I even remotely suggest otherwise? I explicitly said the instructor may decide not to proceed with training. But the student is still not required to disclose medical details to a non-medic.
– abelenky
Nov 29 at 14:41
|
show 3 more comments
up vote
55
down vote
accepted
up vote
55
down vote
accepted
When it comes to the AME, you must disclose everything fully and completely. Failure to do so may void any license and insurance and expose you to extraordinary civil and criminal risk.
When it comes to your flight instructor, who is not a medical professional, you do not need to disclose the specifics of your situation. Saying, "I have concerns about passing a Class III Medical Exam due to certain conditions" is sufficient, and is not the same thing as lying. Do not claim you are healthy when you know you are not.
Your instructor may decide not to continue training until a physical is passed, or he may decide just to be a little extra vigilant during training, and delay certain elements or maneuvers depending on the information you choose to provide.
For example: If you choose to disclose vertigo problems, he may avoid steep turns until medical clearance. If you choose to disclose vision issues, he may avoid night-flight.
Regardless, you will need a medical before your first solo flight.
Do not lie to your instructor, but that is not the same thing as disclosing full details of your health with a non-medic.
When it comes to the AME, you must disclose everything fully and completely. Failure to do so may void any license and insurance and expose you to extraordinary civil and criminal risk.
When it comes to your flight instructor, who is not a medical professional, you do not need to disclose the specifics of your situation. Saying, "I have concerns about passing a Class III Medical Exam due to certain conditions" is sufficient, and is not the same thing as lying. Do not claim you are healthy when you know you are not.
Your instructor may decide not to continue training until a physical is passed, or he may decide just to be a little extra vigilant during training, and delay certain elements or maneuvers depending on the information you choose to provide.
For example: If you choose to disclose vertigo problems, he may avoid steep turns until medical clearance. If you choose to disclose vision issues, he may avoid night-flight.
Regardless, you will need a medical before your first solo flight.
Do not lie to your instructor, but that is not the same thing as disclosing full details of your health with a non-medic.
edited Nov 27 at 15:42
answered Nov 27 at 14:40
abelenky
20.6k860106
20.6k860106
3
Presumably, you're risking your flight instructor's life along with your own when you are flying together. And their plane, their insurance, their livelihood.. You don't owe them details of your condition, but you should think hard about what you're embarking on here..
– George M
Nov 28 at 17:32
Wouldn't it be also wise to disclose things that can kill you like "I have nuts allergy" or treatments that can kill you in case of emergency?
– Alexei Levenkov
Nov 28 at 20:07
1
Wise? Yes. Required? No. The question is about what is required.
– abelenky
Nov 28 at 20:27
2
@abelenky I believe that instructor is NOT required to train someone if he is not sure it is safe. Actually, as far as I understand, he is required not to allow someone to fly if he has any safety concerns. Freedom not to disclose medical details comes with a price, if used.
– Mołot
Nov 29 at 13:15
1
@Molot: Did I even remotely suggest otherwise? I explicitly said the instructor may decide not to proceed with training. But the student is still not required to disclose medical details to a non-medic.
– abelenky
Nov 29 at 14:41
|
show 3 more comments
3
Presumably, you're risking your flight instructor's life along with your own when you are flying together. And their plane, their insurance, their livelihood.. You don't owe them details of your condition, but you should think hard about what you're embarking on here..
– George M
Nov 28 at 17:32
Wouldn't it be also wise to disclose things that can kill you like "I have nuts allergy" or treatments that can kill you in case of emergency?
– Alexei Levenkov
Nov 28 at 20:07
1
Wise? Yes. Required? No. The question is about what is required.
– abelenky
Nov 28 at 20:27
2
@abelenky I believe that instructor is NOT required to train someone if he is not sure it is safe. Actually, as far as I understand, he is required not to allow someone to fly if he has any safety concerns. Freedom not to disclose medical details comes with a price, if used.
– Mołot
Nov 29 at 13:15
1
@Molot: Did I even remotely suggest otherwise? I explicitly said the instructor may decide not to proceed with training. But the student is still not required to disclose medical details to a non-medic.
– abelenky
Nov 29 at 14:41
3
3
Presumably, you're risking your flight instructor's life along with your own when you are flying together. And their plane, their insurance, their livelihood.. You don't owe them details of your condition, but you should think hard about what you're embarking on here..
– George M
Nov 28 at 17:32
Presumably, you're risking your flight instructor's life along with your own when you are flying together. And their plane, their insurance, their livelihood.. You don't owe them details of your condition, but you should think hard about what you're embarking on here..
– George M
Nov 28 at 17:32
Wouldn't it be also wise to disclose things that can kill you like "I have nuts allergy" or treatments that can kill you in case of emergency?
– Alexei Levenkov
Nov 28 at 20:07
Wouldn't it be also wise to disclose things that can kill you like "I have nuts allergy" or treatments that can kill you in case of emergency?
– Alexei Levenkov
Nov 28 at 20:07
1
1
Wise? Yes. Required? No. The question is about what is required.
– abelenky
Nov 28 at 20:27
Wise? Yes. Required? No. The question is about what is required.
– abelenky
Nov 28 at 20:27
2
2
@abelenky I believe that instructor is NOT required to train someone if he is not sure it is safe. Actually, as far as I understand, he is required not to allow someone to fly if he has any safety concerns. Freedom not to disclose medical details comes with a price, if used.
– Mołot
Nov 29 at 13:15
@abelenky I believe that instructor is NOT required to train someone if he is not sure it is safe. Actually, as far as I understand, he is required not to allow someone to fly if he has any safety concerns. Freedom not to disclose medical details comes with a price, if used.
– Mołot
Nov 29 at 13:15
1
1
@Molot: Did I even remotely suggest otherwise? I explicitly said the instructor may decide not to proceed with training. But the student is still not required to disclose medical details to a non-medic.
– abelenky
Nov 29 at 14:41
@Molot: Did I even remotely suggest otherwise? I explicitly said the instructor may decide not to proceed with training. But the student is still not required to disclose medical details to a non-medic.
– abelenky
Nov 29 at 14:41
|
show 3 more comments
up vote
17
down vote
There's no legal or regulatory obligation to tell your instructor about medical conditions as others have said. There may be rare cases where there are insurance considerations the flight school must take into account, in which case they should explain that.
There's good reasons to be open, however:
- Not disclosing a medical condition could increase the risk to both you and your instructor, depending on what that is. The more the instructor knows about you the more they can look out for the specific issues a medical issue may raise
- Training works better if there is a rapport and trust between the instructor and student. Lying to an instructor is a breach of trust, and could damage the relationship.
Think of it this way: how would you like it if you were an instructor and found out a student wasn't telling you he/she was prone to panic attacks? And you found out on final approach when the student suddenly went rigid, or worse pulled back on the controls and put you both in a life threatening situation? You'd want to know so you could make an informed choice on whether to take that student on, and if you did you'd probably elect a different training regime, one with more gradual steps.
add a comment |
up vote
17
down vote
There's no legal or regulatory obligation to tell your instructor about medical conditions as others have said. There may be rare cases where there are insurance considerations the flight school must take into account, in which case they should explain that.
There's good reasons to be open, however:
- Not disclosing a medical condition could increase the risk to both you and your instructor, depending on what that is. The more the instructor knows about you the more they can look out for the specific issues a medical issue may raise
- Training works better if there is a rapport and trust between the instructor and student. Lying to an instructor is a breach of trust, and could damage the relationship.
Think of it this way: how would you like it if you were an instructor and found out a student wasn't telling you he/she was prone to panic attacks? And you found out on final approach when the student suddenly went rigid, or worse pulled back on the controls and put you both in a life threatening situation? You'd want to know so you could make an informed choice on whether to take that student on, and if you did you'd probably elect a different training regime, one with more gradual steps.
add a comment |
up vote
17
down vote
up vote
17
down vote
There's no legal or regulatory obligation to tell your instructor about medical conditions as others have said. There may be rare cases where there are insurance considerations the flight school must take into account, in which case they should explain that.
There's good reasons to be open, however:
- Not disclosing a medical condition could increase the risk to both you and your instructor, depending on what that is. The more the instructor knows about you the more they can look out for the specific issues a medical issue may raise
- Training works better if there is a rapport and trust between the instructor and student. Lying to an instructor is a breach of trust, and could damage the relationship.
Think of it this way: how would you like it if you were an instructor and found out a student wasn't telling you he/she was prone to panic attacks? And you found out on final approach when the student suddenly went rigid, or worse pulled back on the controls and put you both in a life threatening situation? You'd want to know so you could make an informed choice on whether to take that student on, and if you did you'd probably elect a different training regime, one with more gradual steps.
There's no legal or regulatory obligation to tell your instructor about medical conditions as others have said. There may be rare cases where there are insurance considerations the flight school must take into account, in which case they should explain that.
There's good reasons to be open, however:
- Not disclosing a medical condition could increase the risk to both you and your instructor, depending on what that is. The more the instructor knows about you the more they can look out for the specific issues a medical issue may raise
- Training works better if there is a rapport and trust between the instructor and student. Lying to an instructor is a breach of trust, and could damage the relationship.
Think of it this way: how would you like it if you were an instructor and found out a student wasn't telling you he/she was prone to panic attacks? And you found out on final approach when the student suddenly went rigid, or worse pulled back on the controls and put you both in a life threatening situation? You'd want to know so you could make an informed choice on whether to take that student on, and if you did you'd probably elect a different training regime, one with more gradual steps.
answered Nov 27 at 17:39
GdD
30.2k381127
30.2k381127
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
There is no obligation to disclose anything to your CFI, just your AME. That said, your CFI may have useful advice about common problems, if you're willing to talk about them, and they may suggest delaying relevant parts of your training until thosr problems are resolved by your AME.
If a CFI (or anyone besides your AME) asks a question you don't want to answer, then tell them that, rather than evading the question or lying (even if only by omission), and they should respect your privacy. Just knowing there's something they don't know is good enough.
If your flight school requires medical forms, then IMHO, find a new one. All they need to know is whether or not you have your medical certificate.
Flying clubs sometimes have more through medical questionnaires. Some are for insurance data collection, and others are for risk reduction.
– mongo
Nov 28 at 17:51
Some CFIs have more medical background than others, however they are not in a position to do any medical risk evaluation, as much as the FSDO inspectors might bug them for information on a student (when investigating).
– mongo
Nov 28 at 17:52
@mongo: I've rented from FBOs, flight schools and flying clubs, and none ever asked for anything other than my medical cert. No CFI ever asked me medical questions either, though I have asked them for advice on specific issues--as pilots who've dealt with the FAA longer than I have, not specifically as CFIs.
– Stephen Sprunk
Nov 28 at 18:11
I have first hand experience with several flying clubs, and some of them have rather extensive questionnaires. They don't ask you fine medical details, but one question which raised my eyebrows was whether one had received in-patient medical care in the last 10 years. My student was a mother at that club, and she thought the question was potentially discriminatory, as most women who are mothers have been an inpatient. The membership coordinator told me their insurance agent or underwriter asked that question. More common questions are on alcohol and drug treatment and criminal convictions.
– mongo
Nov 28 at 18:17
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
There is no obligation to disclose anything to your CFI, just your AME. That said, your CFI may have useful advice about common problems, if you're willing to talk about them, and they may suggest delaying relevant parts of your training until thosr problems are resolved by your AME.
If a CFI (or anyone besides your AME) asks a question you don't want to answer, then tell them that, rather than evading the question or lying (even if only by omission), and they should respect your privacy. Just knowing there's something they don't know is good enough.
If your flight school requires medical forms, then IMHO, find a new one. All they need to know is whether or not you have your medical certificate.
Flying clubs sometimes have more through medical questionnaires. Some are for insurance data collection, and others are for risk reduction.
– mongo
Nov 28 at 17:51
Some CFIs have more medical background than others, however they are not in a position to do any medical risk evaluation, as much as the FSDO inspectors might bug them for information on a student (when investigating).
– mongo
Nov 28 at 17:52
@mongo: I've rented from FBOs, flight schools and flying clubs, and none ever asked for anything other than my medical cert. No CFI ever asked me medical questions either, though I have asked them for advice on specific issues--as pilots who've dealt with the FAA longer than I have, not specifically as CFIs.
– Stephen Sprunk
Nov 28 at 18:11
I have first hand experience with several flying clubs, and some of them have rather extensive questionnaires. They don't ask you fine medical details, but one question which raised my eyebrows was whether one had received in-patient medical care in the last 10 years. My student was a mother at that club, and she thought the question was potentially discriminatory, as most women who are mothers have been an inpatient. The membership coordinator told me their insurance agent or underwriter asked that question. More common questions are on alcohol and drug treatment and criminal convictions.
– mongo
Nov 28 at 18:17
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
up vote
4
down vote
There is no obligation to disclose anything to your CFI, just your AME. That said, your CFI may have useful advice about common problems, if you're willing to talk about them, and they may suggest delaying relevant parts of your training until thosr problems are resolved by your AME.
If a CFI (or anyone besides your AME) asks a question you don't want to answer, then tell them that, rather than evading the question or lying (even if only by omission), and they should respect your privacy. Just knowing there's something they don't know is good enough.
If your flight school requires medical forms, then IMHO, find a new one. All they need to know is whether or not you have your medical certificate.
There is no obligation to disclose anything to your CFI, just your AME. That said, your CFI may have useful advice about common problems, if you're willing to talk about them, and they may suggest delaying relevant parts of your training until thosr problems are resolved by your AME.
If a CFI (or anyone besides your AME) asks a question you don't want to answer, then tell them that, rather than evading the question or lying (even if only by omission), and they should respect your privacy. Just knowing there's something they don't know is good enough.
If your flight school requires medical forms, then IMHO, find a new one. All they need to know is whether or not you have your medical certificate.
answered Nov 27 at 16:28
Stephen Sprunk
1,248112
1,248112
Flying clubs sometimes have more through medical questionnaires. Some are for insurance data collection, and others are for risk reduction.
– mongo
Nov 28 at 17:51
Some CFIs have more medical background than others, however they are not in a position to do any medical risk evaluation, as much as the FSDO inspectors might bug them for information on a student (when investigating).
– mongo
Nov 28 at 17:52
@mongo: I've rented from FBOs, flight schools and flying clubs, and none ever asked for anything other than my medical cert. No CFI ever asked me medical questions either, though I have asked them for advice on specific issues--as pilots who've dealt with the FAA longer than I have, not specifically as CFIs.
– Stephen Sprunk
Nov 28 at 18:11
I have first hand experience with several flying clubs, and some of them have rather extensive questionnaires. They don't ask you fine medical details, but one question which raised my eyebrows was whether one had received in-patient medical care in the last 10 years. My student was a mother at that club, and she thought the question was potentially discriminatory, as most women who are mothers have been an inpatient. The membership coordinator told me their insurance agent or underwriter asked that question. More common questions are on alcohol and drug treatment and criminal convictions.
– mongo
Nov 28 at 18:17
add a comment |
Flying clubs sometimes have more through medical questionnaires. Some are for insurance data collection, and others are for risk reduction.
– mongo
Nov 28 at 17:51
Some CFIs have more medical background than others, however they are not in a position to do any medical risk evaluation, as much as the FSDO inspectors might bug them for information on a student (when investigating).
– mongo
Nov 28 at 17:52
@mongo: I've rented from FBOs, flight schools and flying clubs, and none ever asked for anything other than my medical cert. No CFI ever asked me medical questions either, though I have asked them for advice on specific issues--as pilots who've dealt with the FAA longer than I have, not specifically as CFIs.
– Stephen Sprunk
Nov 28 at 18:11
I have first hand experience with several flying clubs, and some of them have rather extensive questionnaires. They don't ask you fine medical details, but one question which raised my eyebrows was whether one had received in-patient medical care in the last 10 years. My student was a mother at that club, and she thought the question was potentially discriminatory, as most women who are mothers have been an inpatient. The membership coordinator told me their insurance agent or underwriter asked that question. More common questions are on alcohol and drug treatment and criminal convictions.
– mongo
Nov 28 at 18:17
Flying clubs sometimes have more through medical questionnaires. Some are for insurance data collection, and others are for risk reduction.
– mongo
Nov 28 at 17:51
Flying clubs sometimes have more through medical questionnaires. Some are for insurance data collection, and others are for risk reduction.
– mongo
Nov 28 at 17:51
Some CFIs have more medical background than others, however they are not in a position to do any medical risk evaluation, as much as the FSDO inspectors might bug them for information on a student (when investigating).
– mongo
Nov 28 at 17:52
Some CFIs have more medical background than others, however they are not in a position to do any medical risk evaluation, as much as the FSDO inspectors might bug them for information on a student (when investigating).
– mongo
Nov 28 at 17:52
@mongo: I've rented from FBOs, flight schools and flying clubs, and none ever asked for anything other than my medical cert. No CFI ever asked me medical questions either, though I have asked them for advice on specific issues--as pilots who've dealt with the FAA longer than I have, not specifically as CFIs.
– Stephen Sprunk
Nov 28 at 18:11
@mongo: I've rented from FBOs, flight schools and flying clubs, and none ever asked for anything other than my medical cert. No CFI ever asked me medical questions either, though I have asked them for advice on specific issues--as pilots who've dealt with the FAA longer than I have, not specifically as CFIs.
– Stephen Sprunk
Nov 28 at 18:11
I have first hand experience with several flying clubs, and some of them have rather extensive questionnaires. They don't ask you fine medical details, but one question which raised my eyebrows was whether one had received in-patient medical care in the last 10 years. My student was a mother at that club, and she thought the question was potentially discriminatory, as most women who are mothers have been an inpatient. The membership coordinator told me their insurance agent or underwriter asked that question. More common questions are on alcohol and drug treatment and criminal convictions.
– mongo
Nov 28 at 18:17
I have first hand experience with several flying clubs, and some of them have rather extensive questionnaires. They don't ask you fine medical details, but one question which raised my eyebrows was whether one had received in-patient medical care in the last 10 years. My student was a mother at that club, and she thought the question was potentially discriminatory, as most women who are mothers have been an inpatient. The membership coordinator told me their insurance agent or underwriter asked that question. More common questions are on alcohol and drug treatment and criminal convictions.
– mongo
Nov 28 at 18:17
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
At this stage, when you are just talking about maybe starting to learn to fly, this person is not acting as your flight instructor. He's just a person giving you information about a process. You aren't under any legal obligation to disclose anything to him.
On the other hand, flight instructors often have a decent knowledge of the medical requirements to fly, and might have been able to give you a good opinion on whether any particular condition is disqualifying.
At a later stage, when you are actually taking instruction, it's probably a bad idea to withhold useful information from your instructor. It is likely that a flight school will make you fill in a form which asks about medical conditions, and lying on that would be a very bad idea.
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
At this stage, when you are just talking about maybe starting to learn to fly, this person is not acting as your flight instructor. He's just a person giving you information about a process. You aren't under any legal obligation to disclose anything to him.
On the other hand, flight instructors often have a decent knowledge of the medical requirements to fly, and might have been able to give you a good opinion on whether any particular condition is disqualifying.
At a later stage, when you are actually taking instruction, it's probably a bad idea to withhold useful information from your instructor. It is likely that a flight school will make you fill in a form which asks about medical conditions, and lying on that would be a very bad idea.
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
up vote
3
down vote
At this stage, when you are just talking about maybe starting to learn to fly, this person is not acting as your flight instructor. He's just a person giving you information about a process. You aren't under any legal obligation to disclose anything to him.
On the other hand, flight instructors often have a decent knowledge of the medical requirements to fly, and might have been able to give you a good opinion on whether any particular condition is disqualifying.
At a later stage, when you are actually taking instruction, it's probably a bad idea to withhold useful information from your instructor. It is likely that a flight school will make you fill in a form which asks about medical conditions, and lying on that would be a very bad idea.
At this stage, when you are just talking about maybe starting to learn to fly, this person is not acting as your flight instructor. He's just a person giving you information about a process. You aren't under any legal obligation to disclose anything to him.
On the other hand, flight instructors often have a decent knowledge of the medical requirements to fly, and might have been able to give you a good opinion on whether any particular condition is disqualifying.
At a later stage, when you are actually taking instruction, it's probably a bad idea to withhold useful information from your instructor. It is likely that a flight school will make you fill in a form which asks about medical conditions, and lying on that would be a very bad idea.
answered Nov 27 at 14:42
DJClayworth
1,723922
1,723922
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
The reason he asked that is because he thinks you asked an XY question, and thinks the "X" is "I have a medical problem that I fear might fail me on my medical". So he is asking only to answer your query, and he's not wasting time on the Y, and taking the shorter path to X. Not his first rodeo...
As such, he's listening for relevant medical concerns likely to fail you, i.e. That could affect your safety to fly. It would be an "overshare" to mention your excema, HIV status, enlarged prostate, well-managed cancer, eidetic memory, gluten allergy, or need for Viagra.
So answer the X: say why you think you'd have trouble with the medical.
You can always trot out the old "asking for a friend"... But then, expect to have an instructor who takes precautions against you having that problem in flight with him. Really, a lying relationship is not one you want to have in the cockpit of a plane.
1
I can positively say that the conversation did not go as you describe. The conversation was about requirements to get a pilot license, which included the AME. I asked about the "process" in general terms (where to take one, cost, ect...). He was the one who brought up the exam details where he then asked me the medical questions.
– Programmer
Nov 28 at 18:54
i wan't there, but I can't see how you would frame a question about the process without it opening the door to his query. It isn't really people's habit to give long general overviews, if they think there's a more easily answered, more specific question underneath it.
– Harper
Nov 28 at 20:48
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
The reason he asked that is because he thinks you asked an XY question, and thinks the "X" is "I have a medical problem that I fear might fail me on my medical". So he is asking only to answer your query, and he's not wasting time on the Y, and taking the shorter path to X. Not his first rodeo...
As such, he's listening for relevant medical concerns likely to fail you, i.e. That could affect your safety to fly. It would be an "overshare" to mention your excema, HIV status, enlarged prostate, well-managed cancer, eidetic memory, gluten allergy, or need for Viagra.
So answer the X: say why you think you'd have trouble with the medical.
You can always trot out the old "asking for a friend"... But then, expect to have an instructor who takes precautions against you having that problem in flight with him. Really, a lying relationship is not one you want to have in the cockpit of a plane.
1
I can positively say that the conversation did not go as you describe. The conversation was about requirements to get a pilot license, which included the AME. I asked about the "process" in general terms (where to take one, cost, ect...). He was the one who brought up the exam details where he then asked me the medical questions.
– Programmer
Nov 28 at 18:54
i wan't there, but I can't see how you would frame a question about the process without it opening the door to his query. It isn't really people's habit to give long general overviews, if they think there's a more easily answered, more specific question underneath it.
– Harper
Nov 28 at 20:48
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
The reason he asked that is because he thinks you asked an XY question, and thinks the "X" is "I have a medical problem that I fear might fail me on my medical". So he is asking only to answer your query, and he's not wasting time on the Y, and taking the shorter path to X. Not his first rodeo...
As such, he's listening for relevant medical concerns likely to fail you, i.e. That could affect your safety to fly. It would be an "overshare" to mention your excema, HIV status, enlarged prostate, well-managed cancer, eidetic memory, gluten allergy, or need for Viagra.
So answer the X: say why you think you'd have trouble with the medical.
You can always trot out the old "asking for a friend"... But then, expect to have an instructor who takes precautions against you having that problem in flight with him. Really, a lying relationship is not one you want to have in the cockpit of a plane.
The reason he asked that is because he thinks you asked an XY question, and thinks the "X" is "I have a medical problem that I fear might fail me on my medical". So he is asking only to answer your query, and he's not wasting time on the Y, and taking the shorter path to X. Not his first rodeo...
As such, he's listening for relevant medical concerns likely to fail you, i.e. That could affect your safety to fly. It would be an "overshare" to mention your excema, HIV status, enlarged prostate, well-managed cancer, eidetic memory, gluten allergy, or need for Viagra.
So answer the X: say why you think you'd have trouble with the medical.
You can always trot out the old "asking for a friend"... But then, expect to have an instructor who takes precautions against you having that problem in flight with him. Really, a lying relationship is not one you want to have in the cockpit of a plane.
answered Nov 28 at 18:39
Harper
2,015515
2,015515
1
I can positively say that the conversation did not go as you describe. The conversation was about requirements to get a pilot license, which included the AME. I asked about the "process" in general terms (where to take one, cost, ect...). He was the one who brought up the exam details where he then asked me the medical questions.
– Programmer
Nov 28 at 18:54
i wan't there, but I can't see how you would frame a question about the process without it opening the door to his query. It isn't really people's habit to give long general overviews, if they think there's a more easily answered, more specific question underneath it.
– Harper
Nov 28 at 20:48
add a comment |
1
I can positively say that the conversation did not go as you describe. The conversation was about requirements to get a pilot license, which included the AME. I asked about the "process" in general terms (where to take one, cost, ect...). He was the one who brought up the exam details where he then asked me the medical questions.
– Programmer
Nov 28 at 18:54
i wan't there, but I can't see how you would frame a question about the process without it opening the door to his query. It isn't really people's habit to give long general overviews, if they think there's a more easily answered, more specific question underneath it.
– Harper
Nov 28 at 20:48
1
1
I can positively say that the conversation did not go as you describe. The conversation was about requirements to get a pilot license, which included the AME. I asked about the "process" in general terms (where to take one, cost, ect...). He was the one who brought up the exam details where he then asked me the medical questions.
– Programmer
Nov 28 at 18:54
I can positively say that the conversation did not go as you describe. The conversation was about requirements to get a pilot license, which included the AME. I asked about the "process" in general terms (where to take one, cost, ect...). He was the one who brought up the exam details where he then asked me the medical questions.
– Programmer
Nov 28 at 18:54
i wan't there, but I can't see how you would frame a question about the process without it opening the door to his query. It isn't really people's habit to give long general overviews, if they think there's a more easily answered, more specific question underneath it.
– Harper
Nov 28 at 20:48
i wan't there, but I can't see how you would frame a question about the process without it opening the door to his query. It isn't really people's habit to give long general overviews, if they think there's a more easily answered, more specific question underneath it.
– Harper
Nov 28 at 20:48
add a comment |
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