NTSB: Survival Flight pilots and crew pressured to take risky
flights
Management at Survival Flight, which operated the
January EMS flight that crashed in Ohio killing all three personnel aboard,
pressured pilots and crews to fly in inclement weather, often insisting they
take risky flights other operators had turned down, according to a National
Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) report on the human factors that led to the
fatal accident.
The report, dated Sept. 20, is based on interviews with
current and former employees of Viking Aviation, which under the name Survival
Flight operated the fatal Jan. 29 flight in Ohio. On that night, the Survival
Flight pilot accepted a 69-mile flight between two hospitals that had previously
been turned down by two other HEMS operators.
About 20 minutes after
takeoff, the Bell 407 crashed into hilly, forested terrain about four miles
northeast of Zaleski, Ohio. The pilot, flight nurse and flight paramedic were
killed.
As outlined in the NTSB report, the helicopter
wreckage was located on a tree-covered hill and exhibited significant
fragmentation. The certificated commercial pilot, flight nurse, and flight
paramedic were fatally injured in the crash. Ohio State Highway Patrol
Photo
The NTSB's Operational Factors and Human Performance report,
published Sept. 20 and released when the FAA opened its docket on Nov. 19,
details interviews with current and former pilots at Survival Flight, operated
by Viking Aviation.
The FAA's docket for the case includes 1,025 pages of
interviews. Employees reported incidents of being cussed at by management and
chief pilots at various bases for not accepting flights, pressure from
non-aviation management to make unrealistic flight quotas and inability to take
bases out of service because of wind, weather or maintenance
concerns.
Current Survival Flight employees, including pilots and medical
staff have texted former employees that they are "scared to fly," according to
the report. A flight nurse interviewed for the report said the company's
aviation staff were generally risk averse and safety conscious but were
pressured by management to make unsafe decisions on whether to accept
flights.
Employees describe a culture where pilots and crews were "cussed
at," "berated" and threatened with firing for refusing flights because of
legitimate safety reasons.
Through a process dubbed "reverse helicopter
shopping" managers and operations center employees at Survival Flight would seek
flight requests that other operators had turned down as too risky, then passed
them onto aviation staff and pressured them to accept, according to the
report.
Survival Flight, in written answers provided to Vertical,
categorically disagreed with many of the statements former employees made to
NTSB investigators.
Specifically, the company denies "that crew members
were yelled at for declining flights because of safety concerns," Survival
Flight spokesman Ryan Stubenrauch told Vertical in an email.
"To the
contrary, we train, remind, and require each pilot and nurse in the crew that
they have both the power and the responsibility to reject any flight if they
feel something could go wrong," Stubenrauch wrote. "Every single flight request
that we get can only take off if all three crew members and the operations
control manager okay it. If any one of those four people have doubts, the flight
doesn't take off."
Interviews with NTSB investigators did shed light on
some "human resources problems and communication issues between some employees,"
Stubenrauch said. "We investigated those issues when we became aware of them and
required additional training in an effort to streamline and improve
communication between staff."
The NTSB's report is preliminary, yet HEMS
personnel who spoke to Vertical were uniformly shocked at the lax safety culture
it details and the FAA's failure to recognize the problem before it cost three
people their lives.
"I've heard from many of my colleagues . . . that
reading that report is the worst thing they've ever read in terms of the
operational culture of the program," Dr. Bill Hinckley, medical director and
flight physician at the University of Cincinnati's Air Care and Mobile Care,
told Vertical in an interview.
"It is extremely frustrating and
disheartening. We work so hard to maximize our aviation capability and our
clinical capability. ... When these sorts of things happen, the majority of the
lay public and, in fact, the majority of the medical public, believe that a
helicopter is a helicopter and a HEMS program is a HEMS program and they're all
the same."
When considering flight requests, HEMS best practices
typically include the rule "all to go, one to say no," meaning that the pilot,
flight nurse and EMT or physician should all agree that a flight is safe and
each has veto power.
"Even if the pilot accepts a flight, I as the flight
doc, have the right and responsibility if I'm not comfortable to say 'No,'"
Hinckley said. "So does my partner the flight nurse and so does the
communication specialist and so does the person sitting in the control
center."
Pictured is the accident aircraft, with
registration number "N191SF." The helicopter was registered to and operated by
Viking Aviation, doing business as Survival Flight, as a visual flight rules air
medical flight under the provisions of 14 Code of Federal Regulations part 135
when the accident occurred. Jonathan Quilter Photo
According to the
NTSB report, at Survival Flight that system of redundant checks broke down when
flight decisions were effectively ceded to non-aviation management.
Dr.
Craig Bates, medical director of Metro Life Flight and attending physician at
MetroHealth Department of Emergency Medicine in Cleveland, Ohio, was disturbed
by aspects of the report such as the reverse helicopter shopping, but is
concerned the alarming allegations will detract from opportunities presented by
the report for HEMS operators to enhance their own safety. The NTSB and FAA
should focus on the allegations while the HEMS community focuses on "extracting
lessons" from the tragedy and what led to it.
"This crash happened near
our service area and people we care about are involved in the program. It's
important to emphasize this release doesn't contain any conclusions, but rather
interim information from NTSB's fact-finding process," Bates wrote in an email
to Vertical. "While these documents don't determine blame for the specific
crash, they are a great tool to help assess and improve the safety culture and
processes in each of our own transport programs. There are always opportunities
to improve."
"The quest to optimize quality and safety - whether aviation
or medical - is a constant team effort," Bates added. "This includes working
even harder to reduce real or perceived pressures to initiate and/or complete
transports and further reducing the risks inherent in weather
shopping."
'Reverse Helicopter Shopping'
Helicopter shopping is a
practice in which a medical facility contacts multiple helicopter operators
until one is found that will accept a flight request.
Michael Benton, a
HEMS pilot and aviation safety consultant, said it is not unusual for hospital
staff to call multiple providers because their first priority is patient
wellbeing. Air ambulance pilots and HEMS personnel, conversely, are expected to
prioritize flight safety and risk assessment - previous flight turndowns
included - instead of a patient's condition.
"It's normal for them to
call multiple providers," Benton said. "It becomes negative when you are not
sharing the fact that you called two or three others and what the results
were."
On Jan. 29, Holzer Meigs Hospital first contacted MedFlight, its
regular HEMS provider, but was refused due to weather concerns. Hospital
personnel called at least one other HEMS provider, which also refused the
flight, before Survival Flight accepted.
While the hospital was shopping
for a helicopter to transport a patient, Survival Flight was sometimes shopping
for flights that other operators refused, a process called "reverse helicopter
shopping," according to the report. Citing employee concerns, the NTSB indicates
that personnel in the Survival Flight operational control center (OCC) were
using the weatherturndown.com website to find helicopter air ambulance flight
requests refused by rival operators due to weather concerns.
"One pilot
noted that anytime he received a flight request for a flight outside of their
normal program area he suspected that OCC was using weatherturndown.com to find
flights," the report says. "Another pilot expressed similar suspicions but noted
that this practice by OCC would not affect how flight crews at his base would
approach a flight request."
Survival Flight denies it ever authorized or
condoned reverse helicopter shopping, though the company's operations system
pulls data from multiple sources, including weatherturndown.com, Stubenrauch
said. Data from that website, however, was not used to schedule the Jan. 29
accident flight, he said.
"Only a small handful of flights out of the
thousands and thousands of flights in our company's history have ever come from
data obtained through that website," Stubenrauch said. "On those rare few
occasions, we knew that the other company purportedly turning down the flight
for weather was really turning down the flight because of a maintenance
issue."
Prior to the crash, the Survival Flight helicopter was on its way
from Mount Carmel Grove City Hospital to pick up a patient at another hospital.
Survival Flight Photo
Hinckley said he had never heard of reverse helicopter
shopping in his entire career and that the tactic exists at all is a sign that
major HEMS regulatory changes are due to incentivize safety over
profit.
"There needs to be universal condemnation of both helicopter
shopping and, especially, reverse helicopter shopping," he said.
Survival
Flight has since prohibited its dispatchers from "anything similar to 'reverse
helicopter shopping' even if we have information suggesting the flight was
turned down for something other than weather," Stubenrauch
said.
Pressured to fly
One Survival Flight pilot quoted in the NTSB
report describes "an awful push to get numbers" in an "environment that felt
like competition." The pilot told the NTSB that the company's vice president of
EMS set a 150-flight per-month flight volume quota where the pilot's realistic
estimate was between 30 and 35 flights per month. In another case, management
promised bases a new massage chair if they flew 30 flights in one calendar
month.
"There were numerous company personnel who witnessed people in
management, including the chief pilot, pressuring pilots to accept flights," the
report says.
Benton said the reported pressure Survival Flight management
put on pilots to fly was "a big eye opener."
"If it's true what they said
about the chief [pilot] and those guys, it's pretty shocking," he
said.
One pilot described a situation where another pilot reported to the
[operational control manager] that he was concerned he was too tired to take
another flight after having flown three, but the chief pilot serving as the OCM
at the time convinced the pilot to accept the flight.
The pilot was told
to "maybe drink a cup of coffee before you go ... and try to get it done,"
according to the report.
Numerous pilots and medical personnel witnessed
management being "reprimanded or challenged for declining a flight," according
to the report. When some flights were declined, one medical crew told the NTSB,
"the chief pilot of the company... would call within about 10 minutes and would
cuss out our pilots and belittle them."
Survival Flight outright denies
that any pressure was placed on any of its flight crews to fly in unsafe
conditions. Before any flight takes off, the company requires four people to
give the go-ahead.
"All three crew members and our operational control
manager have the ability to turn down or cancel any flight at any time if they
have a concern about fatigue, weather, or any other potential danger,"
Stubenrauch said.
"Our bases go out of service for weather or maintenance
every day," he added. "Each year, Survival Flight turns down thousands of
flights for weather, maintenance, or other reasons. In fact, one out of every
four flight requests we get are turned down for weather alone."
Survival
Flight's CEO Responds
On Nov. 25, Survival Flight CEO Chris Millard sent a
"Thanksgiving Message" to employees that amounted to a defense of the company
against the NTSB report wrapped in a holiday missive. It created a firestorm
when posted to a HEMS Facebook group's message board.
"Please join me in
remembering the fallen and keeping their families in our thoughts and prayers
through this season," he writes before slamming the NTSB report as "largely
opinion that was collected from former employees who, for one reason or another,
were disgruntled when they left."
"To show the points that the NSTB were
trying to make, they largely used the comments of those who have left us to
insert their own agenda and to try and hurt us," Millard wrote.
Millard
said the NTSB is reviewing information on the accident aircraft flight data
recorder and is "confident that once they get a closer look at this information,
the cause of the crash will be nothing related to weather or anything else that
they have speculated on to date, and all of this noise that is out there
regarding our operations will all be proven to be untrue and unrelated to the
cause."
He followed that up with another email to employees meant "to
ensure that everyone once again understands our company's rules protecting our
safety, including every member of our crew's ability and responsibility to turn
down a flight."
"From day one at Survival Flight, it has been an iron
clad rule that everyone have the right to turn down a flight for any reason,"
Millard wrote. "I also expect and want you to turn down a flight if you feel
it's the right thing to do."
Survival Flight has denied "that crew
members were yelled at for declining flights because of safety concerns."
Sheldon Cohen Photo
Stubenrauch emphasized that the NTSB's report is
preliminary and does not make any official findings. He was hired to speak for
the company as the investigation unfolds toward a final report. The company
recently held a two-day safety stand down at its Ohio bases to emphasize safety.
It also has hired an independent aviation expert to perform a "comprehensive
evaluation of every policy, procedure and employee at our Ohio bases during that
time and will implement any recommendations," Stubenrauch said.
Outcomes
and Opportunities
The NTSB's investigation is not final and does not assign
blame or name a cause for the accident. Neither has the FAA made any
determination of what caused the accident, who is to blame or what new rules and
regulations should result.
Benton did not think major regulatory changes
would result from the investigation, but said the accident has stirred up more
passion for safety awareness since the fiery 2015 Flight for Life helicopter
crash in Frisco, Colorado, that resulted in requirements that certain
helicopters be outfitted with crash-resistant fuel systems.
"I think one
positive thing that's going to come from this ... I've never seen an accident
report generate so much discussion," Benton said. "I don't think you're going to
see regulation changes that come from just one accident, but it's definitely
going to bring it to the forefront."
Bates was more measured in his
assessment of the report, but encouraged the NTSB and FAA to extract as many
lessons as possible from the incident and subsequent investigation to boost HEMS
safety.
"A big reason why the NTSB releases these documents is because
they are an invaluable tool in enhancing safety in our own programs," Bates
said. "I sincerely hope that the FAA will incorporate any eventual NTSB findings
into improved oversight procedures. This would ensure any lessons learned would
benefit a broader population so future air medical crews and patients will be
safer."
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