oddlycalm
07-23-08, 04:04 PM
A pulmonary therapist I know has taken a little finger tip pulse/oximeter with her on some recent flights. She tried it on herself and others while sitting and moving around for an unscientific study. It really put jet lag in stark perspective.
Readings while sitting were 86-90% and while moving around they plummet below 80%. The flight attendants she checked were all in the 72%-78% range. :eek:
For context, sustained saturation levels below 90% are not recommended for healthy people. Saturation levels below 80% and you are seriously stressing your system cardio system. Flight attendants working at sat levels in the mid-70's sounds crazy to me. WTF, the union was worried about 2nd hand smoke but not blood oxigen levels in the 70's?
There are a couple studies on Google, one that actually did arterial blood draws to check blood gasses, that confirm my friend's informal results. I'm stunned that after 45yrs of flying that I'm just hearing about this now. Am I the last person in the world to hear about this...?
oc
Readings while sitting were 86-90% and while moving around they plummet below 80%. The flight attendants she checked were all in the 72%-78% range. :eek:
For context, sustained saturation levels below 90% are not recommended for healthy people. Saturation levels below 80% and you are seriously stressing your system cardio system. Flight attendants working at sat levels in the mid-70's sounds crazy to me. WTF, the union was worried about 2nd hand smoke but not blood oxigen levels in the 70's?
There are a couple studies on Google, one that actually did arterial blood draws to check blood gasses, that confirm my friend's informal results. I'm stunned that after 45yrs of flying that I'm just hearing about this now. Am I the last person in the world to hear about this...?
oc