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#61
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On Aug 13, 1:05 pm, wrote:
KAE wrote: On Sun, 12 Aug 2007 01:27:02 +0200, Mxsmanic wrote: According to numbers released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics and CNN, being a pilot is the second most dangerous occupation in the country (being a fisherman is in first place). Apparently "Flyers" moved up from third to second place since last years CNN article. http://money.cnn.com/2006/08/16/pf/2...jobs/index.htm So CNN, which is it? Are we in second place or third place. Please make up your mind. The BLS numbers are updated every year about this time. The CNN article is just the usual breathless media hype with no analysis of the data and an eye catching conclusion. By far the "most dangerous" occupation by industry is construction, but if you break it down to specific occupations such as brick layer, electrician, etc. you find the specific rates aren't that high. It is the same for aviation. When you lump all commercial pilots together, the rate is high. The BLS just breaks pilots down to two sub-groups; airline pilots, which has a low rate, and all other commercial pilots, which has a rate about three times higher. Of course, all other commercial pilots includes crop dusters, Alaska bush pilots, aerial fire fighters and other such high risk stuff as well as the commuter stuff, so one would expect the rate to be higher. You also have to keep in mind that the total number of work-related fatalities for the year was 5,702, which is everyone not in the military, while the number of traffic deaths was 42,642. So, on the average, you are about 7.5 times more likely go get killed driving to and from the airport as you are flying. And, if you concider there are about 300,000,000 people in the US, your chance of getting killed in traffic is about 1 in 7000. When you get down to the detail, life is actually pretty safe no matter what you do for a living, at least as a civilian. There's one other thing that the whole thing glosses over; that is the definition of "dangerous". Fishermen and pilots may have a higher incidence of fatality when becoming involved in an "accident," but that in itself is only a (IMO) partial component of the measurement of "danger" of an occupation. Other professions are less prone to fatatlity either by proximity to medical facilities (such as in the case of deep sea fishermen - being so far out from shore) or by the less severe nature of an accident (sudden deceleration syndrome in the case of pilots). Highway construction workers, police officers, and firefighters, to me, are in much more "dangerous" professions than pilots, mainly due to the risk exposure inherent to the professions. In other words, to me, the only thing these statistics really help to indicate is degree of survivability when involved in an injury generating situation. (Caveat: I don't have any OSHA data on hand which includes work related injuries; and even then, I believe that it would be "lost work time" type data, including "taking the day off because I sprained my foot stepping on the gas pedal of the hi-lo"). |
#62
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Sometimes I wonder how these stats are derived. I've been reading stats
all my life for this and for that. If there's one thing I've learned about statistics it's that they can be skewed in just about any direction desired by the manipulation of the micros involved to produce the macros desired. Another thing about statistics; take gambling as a perfect example. There is an extremely high possibility that someone will win the lottery. This is what motivates those who play the lottery. On the other hand, the odds that the someone who wins will be you is quite another matter. It always amazes me that people insist on using the first analogy instead of the second when considering a play on the lottery. My wife and I have been playing the lottery game in abstentia for many years. Each day we IMAGINE we have played our house and phone number to the tune of a 2 dollar lottery ticket. We started doing this in 1965. It is now 2007. We have played this "game" for 42 years based on the second analogy of us NOT being the number that comes up. As of today, we have placed 42 years worth of ticket bets at 365x2= 730 dollars a year x 42 years= 30,660 dollars worth of lottery tickets. We haven't won naturally, but by using an unskewed statistic, we have SAVED $30,660 dollars by NOT buying lottery tickets! Not bad really. I enjoy playing the lottery :-)) Dudley Henriques Gattman wrote: "Dudley Henriques" wrote in message ... I guess we went to different marketing schools :-) If the general public feels professional flying is dangerous, my experience as a professional pilot would indicate to me that the gain in professional pay will be more than offset by the loss in customer revenue. Yeah, you definately need to spin your statistics depending on the target. (As virtually all businesses do.) IE, firefighting, cropdusting, flight instruction, test piloting etc are extremely dangerous but the airlines are safe. Similarly, cruise ships and passenger ferryboat operations are statistically nowhere near as dangerous as operating a fishing boat, but they all have a skipper. I saw the report that this is about when it aired on TV. We paused report (gotta love DVRs) and viewed it again just because I couldn't believe my eyes. Let's see...it's more dangerous than firefighting, law enforcement, kick boxing; naturally, though the statistic was backed by nothing substantial. -c -- Dudley Henriques President Emeritus International Fighter Pilots Fellowship |
#63
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![]() "Gattman" wrote in message ... "Dudley Henriques" wrote in message ... I guess we went to different marketing schools :-) If the general public feels professional flying is dangerous, my experience as a professional pilot would indicate to me that the gain in professional pay will be more than offset by the loss in customer revenue. Yeah, you definately need to spin your statistics depending on the target. (As virtually all businesses do.) IE, firefighting, cropdusting, flight instruction, test piloting etc are extremely dangerous but the airlines are safe. Similarly, cruise ships and passenger ferryboat operations are statistically nowhere near as dangerous as operating a fishing boat, but they all have a skipper. I saw the report that this is about when it aired on TV. We paused report (gotta love DVRs) and viewed it again just because I couldn't believe my eyes. Let's see...it's more dangerous than firefighting, law enforcement, kick boxing; naturally, though the statistic was backed by nothing substantial. -c IIRC, whatever happened to Tower Rigging--which I heard was a long term shoo-in for win, place, or show in the dangerous occupation derby. Or was this such a generalized report that dangerous specilties were omitted? Peter |
#64
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On Aug 13, 1:48 pm, Dudley Henriques wrote:
Sometimes I wonder how these stats are derived. I've been reading stats all my life for this and for that. If there's one thing I've learned about statistics it's that they can be skewed in just about any direction desired by the manipulation of the micros involved to produce the macros desired. Another thing about statistics; take gambling as a perfect example. There is an extremely high possibility that someone will win the lottery. This is what motivates those who play the lottery. On the other hand, the odds that the someone who wins will be you is quite another matter. It always amazes me that people insist on using the first analogy instead of the second when considering a play on the lottery. My wife and I have been playing the lottery game in abstentia for many years. Each day we IMAGINE we have played our house and phone number to the tune of a 2 dollar lottery ticket. We started doing this in 1965. It is now 2007. We have played this "game" for 42 years based on the second analogy of us NOT being the number that comes up. As of today, we have placed 42 years worth of ticket bets at 365x2= 730 dollars a year x 42 years= 30,660 dollars worth of lottery tickets. We haven't won naturally, but by using an unskewed statistic, we have SAVED $30,660 dollars by NOT buying lottery tickets! Not bad really. I enjoy playing the lottery :-)) Dudley Henriques One point I would make, Dudley, and that is that your statistic is still slightly "skewed." Although that I agree that you have "saved" 30,000-some-odd dollars, you have placed an inherint assumption in your "statisitic" that you will NEVER win. Unfortunately (or fortunately, depending on how you look at it), the lottery is not a zero sum game. Your statisitic has not taken into consideration any winnings that your 42 years of "ticket buying" would have produced. However, because of the fact that the ODDS are sufficiently low, I guess you could consider the skew close enough to zero to not consider it. Either way, it is just another example of how statistical data is subject to interpretation, and further explains why statisticians have jobs g |
#65
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![]() Doug Semler wrote: On Aug 13, 1:48 pm, Dudley Henriques wrote: Sometimes I wonder how these stats are derived. I've been reading stats all my life for this and for that. If there's one thing I've learned about statistics it's that they can be skewed in just about any direction desired by the manipulation of the micros involved to produce the macros desired. Another thing about statistics; take gambling as a perfect example. There is an extremely high possibility that someone will win the lottery. This is what motivates those who play the lottery. On the other hand, the odds that the someone who wins will be you is quite another matter. It always amazes me that people insist on using the first analogy instead of the second when considering a play on the lottery. My wife and I have been playing the lottery game in abstentia for many years. Each day we IMAGINE we have played our house and phone number to the tune of a 2 dollar lottery ticket. We started doing this in 1965. It is now 2007. We have played this "game" for 42 years based on the second analogy of us NOT being the number that comes up. As of today, we have placed 42 years worth of ticket bets at 365x2= 730 dollars a year x 42 years= 30,660 dollars worth of lottery tickets. We haven't won naturally, but by using an unskewed statistic, we have SAVED $30,660 dollars by NOT buying lottery tickets! Not bad really. I enjoy playing the lottery :-)) Dudley Henriques One point I would make, Dudley, and that is that your statistic is still slightly "skewed." Although that I agree that you have "saved" 30,000-some-odd dollars, you have placed an inherint assumption in your "statisitic" that you will NEVER win. Unfortunately (or fortunately, depending on how you look at it), the lottery is not a zero sum game. Your statisitic has not taken into consideration any winnings that your 42 years of "ticket buying" would have produced. However, because of the fact that the ODDS are sufficiently low, I guess you could consider the skew close enough to zero to not consider it. Either way, it is just another example of how statistical data is subject to interpretation, and further explains why statisticians have jobs g I agree with you. There is always the chance of a win. What we have done is just as you have said; play the potential gain of money saved against the possibility of money won. The "stats" were deemed so slim that playing was never an option. I should add that so far, this logic model has proven to have been correct. Naturally, I assume I will be royally ****ed off if I die next Tuesday and the numbers come up on Wednesday :-)) DH |
#66
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Doug Semler wrote:
snip There's one other thing that the whole thing glosses over; that is the definition of "dangerous". Fishermen and pilots may have a higher incidence of fatality when becoming involved in an "accident," but that in itself is only a (IMO) partial component of the measurement of "danger" of an occupation. Other professions are less prone to fatatlity either by proximity to medical facilities (such as in the case of deep sea fishermen - being so far out from shore) or by the less severe nature of an accident (sudden deceleration syndrome in the case of pilots). Highway construction workers, police officers, and firefighters, to me, are in much more "dangerous" professions than pilots, mainly due to the risk exposure inherent to the professions. In other words, to me, the only thing these statistics really help to indicate is degree of survivability when involved in an injury generating situation. (Caveat: I don't have any OSHA data on hand which includes work related injuries; and even then, I believe that it would be "lost work time" type data, including "taking the day off because I sprained my foot stepping on the gas pedal of the hi-lo"). There is also the issue that the BLS dosn't keep much data on nonfatal injuries. A death usually gets reported to the world, while injury may or may not be reported to anybody and the reporting of such things depends on a whole slew of factors. If you go to: http://www.bls.gov/iif/oshwc/osh/os/ostb1607.txt You will find what the BLS has for nonfatal injury and illness. In it you find the "worst" rate is Beet sugar manufacturing. Now, is this because of some "problem" in that industry, or is it just highly regulated and has to report every time someone stubs their toe? -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#67
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Doug Semler wrote:
One point I would make, Dudley, and that is that your statistic is still slightly "skewed." Although that I agree that you have "saved" 30,000-some-odd dollars, you have placed an inherint assumption in your "statisitic" that you will NEVER win. Unfortunately (or fortunately, depending on how you look at it), the lottery is not a zero sum game. Your statisitic has not taken into consideration any winnings that your 42 years of "ticket buying" would have produced. However, because of the fact that the ODDS are sufficiently low, I guess you could consider the skew close enough to zero to not consider it. Either way, it is just another example of how statistical data is subject to interpretation, and further explains why statisticians have jobs g "Statistically" buying a lottery ticket doesn't increase you chance of winning. i.e. The chance of winning isn't increased enough to be relevant "Statistically". |
#68
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Dudley Henriques wrote:
I should add that so far, this logic model has proven to have been correct. Naturally, I assume I will be royally ****ed off if I die next Tuesday and the numbers come up on Wednesday :-)) DH No you will be royally ****ed off if the numbers come up next Wednesday and you didn't die on Tuesday. Assuming you plan to keep your plan to not buy a ticket going. |
#69
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![]() "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message .. . The general public should continue to believe professional flying is dangerous, and the danger should equate to better pay for professional pilots. Unfortunately, since the general public is aboard the same aircraft as the pilots, danger for pilots equates to danger for passengers, MX reflects the subset of public ignorance that thinks that all pilots carry passengers. "Since the general public is aboard the same aircraft as the pilots." That's funny...I wonder how much of the "general public" rode along in the last civilian test flight, aerobatic performance or crop-dusting operation. -c |
#70
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![]() "Darkwing" theducksmail"AT"yahoo.com wrote in message ... "Mxsmanic" wrote in message ... According to numbers released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics and CNN, being a pilot is the second most dangerous occupation in the country (being a fisherman is in first place). Good thing it is just a hobby for me then, guess I am completely safe. ---------------------------------------- DW It just means that, if "something unfortunate was to happen to you", then the statistic would be counted against your day job. Peter |
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