German airlines to set up med testing

Berlin / BLOOMBERG

Germany will step up surprise tests for airline pilots to detect medications and drugs nearly a year after a Germanwings co-pilot suffering from depression deliberately crashed his plane, the SuddeutscheZeitung newspaper reported on Saturday.
The Munich paper, citing a document which outlined a series of measures approved in Berlin Friday, reported that the new programme will come into effect by the end of May. Berlin’s lower house of parliament, the Bundestag, must still approve the new tests.
CarstenSpohr, head of German air giant Lufthansa, which owns low-cost subsidiary Germanwings, already announced in May 2015 surprise medical checks for the company’s pilots.
Spohr’s announcement came shortly after the March 24 Germanwings crash, when all 150 people on board a jet travelling from Barcelona to Duesseldorf were killed after 27-year-old Andreas Lubitz crashed the plane into the Alps.
After the crash, it was revealed that Lubitz suffered from depression, and that the airline knew about his health condition.
The irlines must ensure that only employees in a state to ensure “a safe and controlled” journey would be allowed to fly.
The tests would make sure that pilots are not “under the influence of medication, alcohol or other psychoactive drugs,” when there is a doubt about their abilities.
In July 2015, the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) recommended more medical testing for pilots, including more psychological tests.

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