Word: cabinent
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...they? Despite growing criticism, airlines continue to maintain that a busy aircraft cabin poses no greater health risk to passengers than a crowded bus. "We have no interest in playing down or covering up any supposed risks, since our business relies on bringing people to their destination happy and healthy," says Véronique Brachet, a spokeswoman for Air France. Other industry experts point to an absence of conclusive medical links between flying and dying, or even getting sick. "There is no scientifically valid evidence that the cabin environment in commercial aircraft is unhealthful," says Dr. Russell Rayman, executive director...
...effect of low cabin pressure or dry cabin air, Lutz Bergau, Lufthansa's chief medical officer, says such things have not been convincingly associated with thrombosis, citing a study the airline conducted in 1993. But new research may be about to change all that. This week the World Health Organization is convening a meeting of scientists and industry representatives in Geneva to look at DVT specifically in the context of air travel. On the agenda: plans to review all the medical evidence available about DVT and to identify priority research areas. Separately, some of the scientists will also discuss...
...cramped cabin conditions do in fact lead to the immobility that can cause DVT, then European authorities may have a case to answer. Regulations limiting the number of seats on a plane relate to the number of emergency exits, not to passenger comfort - even though there are rules defining minimum space for transporting live animals. It's a similar situation with cabin air quality. Rules set by the Joint Aviation Authority, a pan-European coalition that develops regulations on aircraft design and maintenance, stipulate that the cabin must be free of "harmful or hazardous" concentrations of gases or vapors, though...
...prior to flying. Though taking aspirin before takeoff may ward off clots for some people, pregnant women, among others, shouldn?t do it. Check with your doctor. Once inside the plane, make sure you have as much room to move your legs as possible?a good reason to store cabin baggage in the overhead compartment rather than under the seat in front of you where it can take up precious legroom. During the flight, drink lots of bottled water, avoid alcohol, straighten and move your legs and even consider wearing support stockings, which can improve blood flow in the veins...
...aircraft cabin is an unusual environment," says Robert Bor, an aviation psychologist at London Guildhall University. "The altitude, the lower air pressure, the noise - all of those things can lead to hostile behavior." And the little things can make all the difference: the guy in the next seat whose broad shoulders invade your personal seat space, the subtle battles for armrests, overhead bin space and even meal choices. "You are putting people who are unfamiliar with one another in a competitive environment," says Bor, "and that creates rivalry...