What maternal mortality rates have to do with air safety

Published by Julia Volkovah under on 12:46 AM
Attendees at the annual meeting of the International Society of Air safety Investigators are an experienced - may I say largely grizzled lot.  Over beers (or sake) you’ll hear members recounting crash investigations that included nights spent swatting misquotes, hairy helicopter rides to inaccessible mountain passes or days spent holding back sea sickness while towing black box beacon locaters from the back of boats.

Marcus Costa chief of accident investigations for the International Civil Aviation Organization recalls worrying that piranhas might have been lurking in a river-submerged cockpit on one particular investigation in Brazil.
But what I’ve never heard in the five years I’ve been attending the annual meeting is discussion of maternal mortality rates. That changed this year.


In a presentation Tuesday at the 41st ISASI meeting here in Sapporo, Japan, Robert Matthews, senior analyst at the accident investigation and prevention office at the Federal Aviation Administration made a creative and entirely logical leap in suggesting a nation’s attention to safe aviation operations can parallel other social indicators including, maternal and infant mortality rates, gross domestic product and standards of governance. 
Matthews, an air safety specialist who appears not to have strayed too far from his academic background as a political economist, focused on air safety statistics in Asia and concluded that safety in the region had improved dramatically since the first half of 1990. At that time, Asian countries had the world’s highest accident rates.  In 20 years since, Japan, Singapore, Hong Kong and Malaysia safety has improved. Now these countries are on par with the European Union, the United States and Canada.

China, the Republic of Korea and Vietnam showed noticeable improvement as well. 
Those countries still struggling - Indonesia, Central Asia, Pakistan and the Philippines – had in common high maternal and infant mortality rates and what Matthews called “national challenges of basic governance and stability.”
“Competing demands for national resources where human development needs are great” creates challenges for aviation safety, Matthews told the conference.  It’s an intriguing and provocative approach for an industry that tends to conventionality.
Matthews attributed improvements in safety in Asia to a number of factors, expansion of the fleet, increases in air travel, industry programs that audit safety practices and governments that blacklist unsafe carriers.

But from the 30,000 foot view, Matthews report is a reminder that safety isn’t accomplished in isolation. A government's commitment to its people is an essential ingredient.
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