Diabetes Pilot
Jun 23, 2017 A report recently presented at the annual meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes indicates that insulin users can safely function as airplane pilots. The study was conducted in Great Britain, which in 2012 became only the second country (after Canada) to issue class 1 medical certificates for commercial pilot licenses. The agency does not track commercial flights of pilots with insulin-treated diabetes and could not say whether this was the first such flight. But the American Diabetes Association, which is in.
- A report recently presented at the annual meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes indicates that insulin users can safely function as airplane pilots. The study was conducted in Great Britain, which in 2012 became only the second country (after Canada) to issue class 1 medical certificates for commercial pilot licenses.
- May 27, 2015 An applicant with a diagnosis of diabetes mellitus controlled by medication may be considered by the FAA for an Authorization of a Special Issuance of a Medical Certificate (Authorization). For medications currently allowed, see chart of Acceptable Combinations of Diabetes Medications ( PDF ).
This Spring, the very first insulin-dependent pilot was approved by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to fly commercially! On Monday, April 13, 2020, pilot Pietro Marsala, who was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes in 2012 while he was in flight school, was issued a First Class Medical Certificate, which provides clearance to fly commercially in the United States.
Before Pietro’s approval, no insulin-dependent people were certified to fly commercially in the US. In 2015, the FAA announced that they would be considering a reversal of this policy and on November 7, 2019, they announced that they would officially begin reviewing First Class Medical Certificate applications from those with insulin-dependent diabetes. Very few pilots with insulin-dependent diabetes have been approved so far, but it is hoped that Pietro’s approval will pave the way for future pilots.
Key to Pietro’s approval has been Continuous Glucose Monitoring (CGM) technology, as it provides clear and consistent feedback on blood sugar levels, increasing safety in the air. CGM company Dexcom was an integral part of the process, as the CLARITY data that its systems provide gave FAA administration a deep understanding of how the technology works.
Affordable access to best-in-class technology like CGMs will be vital not only for more insulin-dependent pilots to be able to take to the air, but also for anyone with insulin-dependent diabetes to live a safe and healthy life.
Beyond Type 1 took some time to speak with Pietro to celebrate the momentous occasion. Hear from Pietro below.
When did you know you wanted to be a pilot?
I grew up in Chicago near O’Hare Airport. My parents are Italian immigrants and most of my family is still in Italy, so my parents would take us there at least every other summer. I was 5 or 6 when I fell in love with aviation.
When I was 10 we moved to Phoenix, Arizona. I begged my parents to buy me the Microsoft Flight Simulator, a computer program that mimics real-time flying. My parents and brother would sit behind me on the couch and I would act like I was speaking from the flight deck. About a half hour into the “flight,” they would get bored. I would “take off” in the afternoon, then set the program on autopilot, “flying” to Italy. I would go to sleep on the couch, set an alarm to wake up in the morning when I was “over Portugal and Spain,” then “land in Italy.”
Fast forward to high school and my counselor asked “what do you want to do when you leave here?” I didn’t think I was smart enough to be a pilot because I looked at pilots like they were superheroes. But she gave me a flying magazine, where – after some major delays on my part – I found an ad that said “Learn to fly in sunny Phoenix, Arizona.”
It was a flight school offering flight lessons. We did a discovery flight – you go up with an instructor for an hour or so. I fell in love and knew that’s what I wanted to do. Within weeks I was attending my first day.
When were you diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes?
In 2012. I was 21 years old and in the middle of my flight training. For about 2 weeks straight, I was feeling really weird. I had the classic symptoms – the dry mouth, the losing weight. I went to my family physician and he misdiagnosed me with Type 2 diabetes.
I immediately got on the FAA site to see what kind of impact this would have on whether or not I could fly. With Type 2 diabetes, if you can manage it on oral medications – without insulin – you can still fly. The FAA required me to stabilize my condition on Metformin for 6 months. As I know now, I was in the honeymoon phase – my body was still producing some insulin on it’s own – so it looked like the Metformin was working. I got my A1c back down from 10% to around 5-6%. I put weight back on.
But by that Fall, I started to see a rise in my levels again. I didn’t know what was going on. My mom recommended we go for a second opinion, so I went to see an endocrinologist. He ran more tests. It was confirmed that I actually have Type 1.
Hearing that was even harder than hearing I had diabetes in the beginning. I knew that, at the time, insulin was a disqualifying drug. I was crying like a little kid. I had worked so hard to have my health under control and then all of a sudden it was taken again. I knew my aviation career was done.
I had to take another six months off from flying to prove that I was stabilized. I got on a Dexcom CGM pretty quickly after I was officially diagnosed with Type 1 and have never flown a day on insulin without it. I’ve never had any episodes where I needed medical attention and I know that’s because of my CGM.
I was restricted to a 3rd class medical certification – only able to do flight instruction if I wanted to make money, or to just fly for fun. So I finished out my training and started flight instructing. I was flying with people who didn’t know how to fly and I was the one in charge, flying anywhere from three to almost eight hours every day.
I realized that I actually had more responsibility as a flight instructor; I’m monitoring myself and my students. So I decided it was time to go back to the FAA and prove that I was stable enough for a commercial certification.
Tell us about working with the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)
The first time I met in person with the FAA wasn’t planned. It was 2016 and I was in DC as a tourist. I decided to walk into the FAA to introduce myself since I was right there. I had already been in contact with the deputy air surgeon Dr. DeVoll, so I sent him a quick email that I was there. He set up an appointment the next day.
He talked to me for an hour and a half; he wanted to understand my story. They had just issued a statement that they would start considering cases of insulin-dependent pilots. He told me that they weren’t there yet, but they were looking more into CGM data.
I was handing over a ton of voluntary blood sugar data, which I think was maybe helpful in them seeing I was fit to fly. I’m not perfect. We can’t be. But I was able to prove that none of the times I was out of range was when I was in flight. My endocrinologist and my employer both endorsed my safety.
In late 2017, I decided I was going to create an Excel spreadsheet so they could see my CGM data against my flight data. I put all of my activities in a notes line – insulin doses, carbohydrates consumed to keep my levels balanced, how I was keeping myself as flat-lined as possible. Access to that intense level of data is what helped the FAA create their protocols for us.
I was driving when I got the emails that I was approved. I had to pull over to a safe spot because I was so nervous. I opened the email and I just started crying like a little kid. It was everything that I had worked for. It was so relieving. It was the best feeling I ever had in my life.
For other people on insulin who want to fly commercially, what do you want them to know?
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This will all be an ongoing process for the FAA to figure out how to do this well and keep everyone safe.
And unfortunately flying is a rich man’s sport. In order to be able to fly daily to show all the data you need to prove you’re safe, you have to have the means to do so. For the initial certification, that’s not doable for everyone. But dream big because this is attainable.
I was so frustrated that it was a blanket “no” before, so I told myself that I was going to play my part, provide my data, be patient, and cooperate. It doesn’t happen overnight. It can take a long time.
I recognize that out of anything else in my life that I could have gotten, I got the disease that disqualified me from the thing I love. Out of my entire big family, I’m the only one with Type 1, and the only one who has a job where Type 1 originally disqualified me.
It makes me think – maybe this was meant to be. Maybe this was the path I was supposed to pave. It hurt. I’m ten years behind everyone else, but I did make a difference.
Editor’s Note: Beyond Type 1 has been following the FAA’s policies on medically approving insulin-dependent commercial pilots and knows that despite Pietro’s approval, very few pilots with Type 1 diabetes have yet been approved to fly. We continue to follow this ongoing story.
This content was made possible with support from Dexcom
(CNN) — Just before 7:30 a.m. on June 22, Southwest Airlines flight 370 lifted off from McCarran International Airport, climbing westward over the Las Vegas Strip with Captain Bob Halicky at the controls.
Banking north, the twin-engined Boeing 737-700 with the airline’s ubiquitous blue, yellow and red livery leveled off at its cruising altitude of 40,000 feet for its flight to Seattle-Tacoma International Airport.
For the passengers on board, it was a normal flight, landing twelve minutes early.
But Halicky, a 59-year-old Las Vegas resident, had waited nine years for this opportunity. It was the first United States commercial flight with a pilot with insulin-treated diabetes at the controls, according to the American Diabetes Association, a milestone years in the making.
A triumphant return to the skies
“It was super exciting to return to the cockpit and also to be the first ever [type 1 insulin dependent] pilot in America to fly [commercially],” Halicky told CNN after the flight.
For years, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) didn’t allow pilots with insulin-treated diabetes to fly commercial airliners, even as other countries like Canada and the United Kingdom began to ease their restrictions, allowing these pilots to fly commercially provided they did so with a second pilot.
The FAA deemed it too high risk. Any pilot diagnosed with insulin-treated diabetes was barred from flying commercially.
The American Diabetes Association, the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association and other organizations lobbied the FAA to re-examine their policy.
Last November, the FAA announced that pilots with insulin-dependent diabetes could apply for the first-class medical certificate required to fly commercially. Under the new guidance, the first batch of medicals was issued in April.
Flying first-class medical
“The FAA issued a new medical protocol late last year for pilots with insulin-treated diabetes mellitus (ITDM),” the FAA said in a statement to CNN. “The decision was based on the advancement in medical technology and the treatment of ITDM. The protocol allows pilots with ITDM to apply for a special-issuance medical certificate to have air transport, commercial or private pilot privileges.”
To date, the FAA says it has issued six first-class medicals for pilots with insulin-treated diabetes. The agency does not track commercial flights of pilots with insulin-treated diabetes and could not say whether this was the first such flight. But the American Diabetes Association, which is in contact with these six pilots, hailed Monday’s Southwest flight as a breakthrough.
“This is a historic day for pilots living with diabetes who have been sidelined for too long, as well as for all people living with diabetes,” said ADA CEO Tracey Brown. “The American Diabetes Association (ADA) has had the great privilege of partnering with incredible pilots over the course of the past decade to make this dream a reality. These pilots are tireless advocates whose dedication is remarkable.”
A career in flight
Halicky had spent his entire career in the skies before diabetes derailed his flying. He was an Air Force pilot from 1987 to 1991. He joined Southwest Airlines in 1993, while also flying with the Arizona Air National Guard. In 2002, he retired from the Air National Guard, but kept flying for Southwest, which declined to comment for this article.
In July 2011, Halicky was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes. He stayed in the industry as an instructor pilot, helping younger pilots build experience in simulators.
When the FAA allowed insulin-dependent pilots to apply for first-class medicals, Halicky was one of the first on the list, submitting his blood sugar history, doctor’s notes, his insulin regime and more.
On April 13, 2020, the FAA issued Halicky a first-class medical for the first time in nearly a decade. He finished the necessary requalification course as soon as he could, and on Monday morning, he climbed into the cockpit of a SWA 370, ready to helm a commercial flight for the first time in nearly a decade.
A huge uplift to the diabetes community
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In the air, Halicky couldn’t stop smiling. “I’m super pumped about this,” he said after landing in Seattle, calling it “a huge uplift to the diabetes community.”
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But he had little time to celebrate the accomplishment.
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Less than two hours after landing, he was back in the air on a flight to Oakland. In the next few days, he has stops in Albuquerque, Phoenix, Houston, Milwaukee and more before he returns to Las Vegas, a commercial pilot once again.
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