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Old August 16th 08, 03:25 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
Vaughn Simon
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Posts: 735
Default cabin pressure and health


wrote in message
...
Boeing funded a clinical trial to actually determine the effects of
being at an 8000 foot altitude for extended periods...


The airlines do nothing to warn folks that they will be subjected to high
altitude conditions on a flight. As a result, There is no doubt that there are
people (lung conditions, elderly etc.) riding in airliners without supplemental
oxygen who shouldn't be allowed to do so.

My wife has a lung condition. At sea level she barely maintains a reliable 90%
(the accepted minimum) oxygen saturation, in an airliner I have seen her "sats"
dip into the 70's. The airlines seem to go out of their way to make it
difficult and expensive for passengers to order supplemental oxygen. The normal
charge is $100 per flight segment (typical $400 for a round trip flight), and
each airline has a different convoluted and uncertain bureaucracy for ordering
oxygen.


--
Vaughn


Nothing personal, but if you are posting through Google Groups I may not receive
your message. Google refuses to control the flood of spam messages originating
in their system, so on any given day I may or may not have Google blocked. Try
a real NNTP server & news reader program and you will never go back. All you
need is access to an NNTP server (AKA "news server") and a news reader program.
You probably already have a news reader program in your computer (Hint: Outlook
Express). Assuming that your Usenet needs are modest, use
http://news.aioe.org/ for free and/or http://www.teranews.com/ for a one-time
$3.95 setup fee.


Will poofread for food.