ThomasR
Eye of the Storm
- Joined
- Feb 20, 2004
- Posts
- 324
No excuse for Rude
People working with the public can maintain a professional profile for about seven to eight hours without a break. With a break somewhere after the sixth hour a trained personaility can maintain composure up to ten hours. But rarely more than ten and mostly less.
What I am saying is that people have to work at being professional with the public; and that work wares on ones resistance to stress. After reaching the limit all it takes is something to happen out of the expected and the frustration is impossible to restain. It comes out in body language and voice tone first and progresses to hostility.
Controlers who become rude over the radio are either over worked, under supervised or both. I don't know if there are any academic studies on this issue, but I have conducted undocumented studies on many people working in the public eye and the stats all confirm the range of tolerance. The stats are the same for any profession across the full range of age and training.
Hopitals use to run pilots over the limit with the reasoning that they are at rest between flights. As long as you are on duty you are subject to public stress and performance declines at a specific limit. Fortunately most hospitals have adjusted their EMS requirements for duty time.
People working with the public can maintain a professional profile for about seven to eight hours without a break. With a break somewhere after the sixth hour a trained personaility can maintain composure up to ten hours. But rarely more than ten and mostly less.
What I am saying is that people have to work at being professional with the public; and that work wares on ones resistance to stress. After reaching the limit all it takes is something to happen out of the expected and the frustration is impossible to restain. It comes out in body language and voice tone first and progresses to hostility.
Controlers who become rude over the radio are either over worked, under supervised or both. I don't know if there are any academic studies on this issue, but I have conducted undocumented studies on many people working in the public eye and the stats all confirm the range of tolerance. The stats are the same for any profession across the full range of age and training.
Hopitals use to run pilots over the limit with the reasoning that they are at rest between flights. As long as you are on duty you are subject to public stress and performance declines at a specific limit. Fortunately most hospitals have adjusted their EMS requirements for duty time.