Department of Anaesthesiology, Intensive Care Medicine, Emergency Medicine and Pain Medicine, Johannes Wesling University Hospital Minden, Ruhr-University Bochum, Hans-Nolte-Straße 1, 32429, Minden, Germany.
German Association of Aerospace Medicine (DGLRM), Munich, Germany.
Sci Rep. 2024 Nov 14;14(1):27969. doi: 10.1038/s41598-024-77994-3.
Numerous accidents occur with General Aviation aircraft every year. To date, pre-emptive prediction of survival or death is impossible. The current study aims to identify significant factors elementary to predict survival after General Aviation (GA) aircraft accidents. The Implementation of a scoring system, including these factors, may facilitate emergency control centre response. Data of flight accidents over a 20-year period (extracted from the German Federal Bureau of Aircraft Accident Investigation [BFU]) was analysed for fixed-wing motorized small aircrafts below 5,700 kg MTOW. Factors of interest were analysed using Chi- and Mann-Whitney-U-Tests. Logistic regression was used to establish a score to calculate the probability of a fatal outcome after an aircraft accident. The BFU lists 1,595 GA aircraft accidents between 2000 and 2019. The factors "third quarter of the year" (p = 0.04), "last quarter of the year" (p = 0.002), "fire" (p < 0.0001), "distance from airport > 10 km" (p < 0.0001), "landing" (p < 0.0001) and "cruise" (p < 0.0001), significantly correlated positively or negatively with a fatal outcome. "Take-off", "approach", "month", "day of the week", "persons on board above three", "night-time" and "icing conditions" showed no significant correlation. Using logistic regression "third quarter of the year" and "cruise" were excluded when using the B-STEP method. Including the four significant parameters, the score showed a strong effect with f = 0.709. The analysis of GA aircraft accidents in Germany enabled the identification of relevant factors and establishment of a new scoring system for survival prediction after small aircrafts accidents below 5,700 kg MTOW. The implementation of the scoring system in emergency control centres in the context of digital development and artificial intelligence can improve emergency response planning and distribution.
每年都有大量通用航空飞机事故发生。迄今为止,无法预先预测生存或死亡。本研究旨在确定对通用航空(GA)飞机事故后生存有重要意义的因素。实施包括这些因素的评分系统可能有助于应急控制中心做出响应。分析了 20 年来(从德国联邦飞机事故调查局[BFU]提取)的固定翼机动小型飞机低于 5700 公斤最大起飞重量(MTOW)的飞行事故数据。使用卡方和曼-惠特尼 U 检验分析感兴趣的因素。使用逻辑回归建立一个评分,以计算飞机事故后致命后果的概率。BFU 列出了 2000 年至 2019 年期间的 1595 起 GA 飞机事故。“一年的第三季度”(p=0.04)、“一年的最后一个季度”(p=0.002)、“火灾”(p<0.0001)、“离机场距离>10 公里”(p<0.0001)、“着陆”(p<0.0001)和“巡航”(p<0.0001)这四个因素与致命后果呈显著正相关或负相关。“起飞”、“进近”、“月份”、“星期几”、“机上三人以上”、“夜间”和“结冰条件”没有显著相关性。使用 B-STEP 方法时,“一年的第三季度”和“巡航”在使用逻辑回归时被排除在外。包括四个显著参数,评分显示出很强的效果,f=0.709。对德国通用航空飞机事故的分析使我们能够确定相关因素,并为低于 5700 公斤 MTOW 的小型飞机事故后生存预测建立新的评分系统。在数字发展和人工智能的背景下,在应急控制中心实施评分系统可以改进应急响应计划和分配。