US Carriers, Covid-19, and You: They Still Don’t Get It.

By Robert McGarvey

We aren’t flying and evidence mounts that many frequent flyers are unpersuaded that their health is a concern of the carriers. Screamed a Travel Weekly headline: “Many frequent flyers won’t be back for a while.” 

It elaborated that, according to research by consulting firm ICF, “Without a Covid-19 vaccine or widespread testing, 22% of frequent American travelers don’t expect to fly domestically until after summer 2021, according to an ICF survey.

“For international travel, that number jumps 41%.”

We have every reason to be skeptical – even fearful – of air travel, airports, and public transportation. This is all made scarily vivid in the “Safe Travel Barometer” compiled by consulting and analytics firm VIDEC.  What the company did was look at a range of metrics – are middle seats empty? Are face masks required? Are hand sanitizers available? Are there traveler temperature checks? Do passengers submit a health declaration form, etc?

US carriers are woeful underperformers. There are steps carriers can take to protect passengers and crew. But many US carriers just are not implementing them. 

You don’t want Covid-19 and I know that because I have had it.  It sucked. No, I wasn’t hospitalized. But I felt miserable for nine or ten days.

I did not get it on a trip.  But having had it, I am more cautious about getting in contact with people and places that may bring an encore. (And there is some evidence that antibody immunity, if there is any at all is fleeting.)

If there’s a powerful take-away from the Videc research, it’s fly international carriers to stay healthier.

Noted VIDEC: “only 31% of North American airlines introduced thermal scanning – among them American Airlines, Air Canada and Frontier Airlines. In contrast, 88% of Middle East airlines and 70% of Asia Pacific airlines have already enacted pre-boarding traveler temperature checks. Further, with the recent exception of Southwest Airlines, most of the commercial carriers in North America do not enforce travelers from declaring their recent health details, versus 33% of Asia Pacific airlines already doing so.”

What VIDEC has created is a table with carrier names on the left, and then checkpoints: Temperature checks, face masks, hand sanitizer, health declaration form, empty middle seat, etc.

Delta, for instance, whiffs on temperature checks and health declaration forms.  It succeeds with face masks and empty middle seats.

Is that good enough?

Singapore Air, by contract, requires temperature checks, face masks, and health declaration forms, and middle seats are empty.

My advice: check the VIDEC scorecard before booking a flight – and of course stay mindful that with many carriers the rules and requirements are in flux. At first, the main US carriers said they required face masks, for instance, but soon we realized the rules were not enforced. But now, apparently, on most US carriers face masks are in fact required.  

Can we not debate what is a good screening tactic for Covid-19 and what isn’t?  You bet, and in fact there are reasons to think temperature checks, while easy enough to do fast, are not reliable. Said WHO:  “Temperature screening alone, at exit or entry, is not an effective way to stop international spread, since infected individuals may be in incubation period, may not express apparent symptoms early on in the course of the disease, or may dissimulate fever through the use of antipyretics; in addition, such measures require substantial investments for what may bear little benefits.”

WHO offers its perspective on useful screens: “It is more effective to provide prevention recommendation messages to travellers and to collect health declarations at arrival, with travellers’ contact details, to allow for a proper risk assessment and a possible contact tracing of incoming travellers.”

Boil it down and in my view what I need, at a minimum, from a carrier is an enforced face mask requirement, an empty middle seat, and a health declaration form.  Hand sanitizer should be readily available too.

What all this is, though, is a changing puzzle. We are at around 500,000 deaths worldwide (about 25% in the US).  There is so much we still don’t know.  Safety practices need to stay flexible and adaptable.

The one undebatable reality: there need be better safety practices to get more of us back in the air and traipsing through airports.  Progress is getting made: the US carrier new insistence on face masks is a step. We just need more steps.

3 thoughts on “US Carriers, Covid-19, and You: They Still Don’t Get It.”

  1. You point out two important things: you get sick from Covid, but you recover. If the media was interested in promoting calm, they would point out the low mortality rate instead of the infection rate, which is nothing more than a guess as until EVERYONE is tested, no one knows how many people had it without symptoms. Your second point about antibodies is that SOME research shows that antibodies go dormant and undetectable until the body needs them again. So take precautions and SHUT OFF the media.

  2. Before you dismiss this as mild illness, please do a little reading in legitimate medical sources. As a “mild illness” it can be devastating. As a biologist, I don’t have a problem with Darwinian Selection. The problem is that you can pass the disease on to others without knowing it or get healthcare workers ill or kill them. In addition, your long term care post-stroke or heart attack since you blood can turn to sludge can be a costly problem to society. Cognitive issues are an emerging problem even in younger patients. Type A blood likely sets you up for a grimmer Illness. Disinfection is critical and although I spent my professional life traveling internationally, I have no interest in flying until the airlines have their act together. https://www.medpagetoday.com/infectiousdisease/covid19/87273?fbclid=IwAR1X-G_hCXqzKaTQVQkyAvjtRtUOCuYbzVWH0mLz6wXJdW8-ck7yEL_PjBk

    Wear the damn mask. Be a good citizen and worry about others. By the way, the published mortality rate is currently 5-6% in the US.

  3. A 40+ year road warrior with >6 million commercial air miles on my frame, I have more than a casual interest in the subject of air safety vis-a-vis COVID. I’ve experienced my share of crazy and at times scary stuff aloft: Engine fires, cabin decompression, smoke in cabin, lightning strike, icing, etc. But owing to the skill of our commercial pilots and generally well maintained fleets, I’ve not once been truly concerned for my safety… until now. The flying is not the issue. Rather, it’s being herded into a cramped aluminum tube with 180 strangers, about half of whom have shown very little interest in the wellbeing of those around them.

    Once again, I find myself in furious agreement with Mr. McGarvey. Though doing business requires regular travel, I’m taking a wait & see approach to resuming air travel. I’m a long time Delta fan boy, but am waiting to see if their smart moves to mandate masking and void center seats are buttressed by stronger pre-board health screening and other measures.

    Great, timely piece, Robert. Thank you.

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