Intoxicated in the air: drunk pilots make headlines but are thankfully rare

Every few months, a pilot somewhere in the world is stopped before a jet takes off because of suspicion of drunkenness. It makes headlines and gives nervous travellers another reason to avoid flying.
But despite their notoriety, such cases are extremely rare.
Each day, there are 90,000 flights around the world, carrying more than 8 million people. And the overwhelming majority of pilots in those cockpits are sober.
Pilots take being fit to fly seriously and act accordingly,“ says former US Airways pilot John M. Cox, now CEO of the consulting firm Safety Operating Systems. ”Pilots know they are one of the most carefully monitored professions and therefore, are very conservative.“
There are occasional lapses. The latest incident occurred Saturday morning when two United Airlines pilots were pulled from their flight — and arrested — as they prepared to fly 141 passengers from Scotland to the United States.
