The HIMS Program is not just a medical process—it is an institutional machine. Central to its design are the Basic and Advanced Topics Seminars, which bring together physicians, airline managers, union peer pilots, aftercare providers, and FAA staff for coordinated training.
One Curriculum, Many Enforcers
By running its own training pipeline, HIMS ensures every stakeholder hears the same message: pilots must comply; resistance equals denial; independent opinions are suspect. In practice:
- FAA staff reinforce expectations across the industry.
- Airline supervisors operationalize those expectations as policy.
- Union peers echo the same framing to “support” pilots into compliance.
- Doctors and counselors are trained to treat dissent as a symptom, not a perspective.
Why It Matters
When training is centralized, oversight becomes internal—and criticism is sidelined. A system that trains everyone in the same playbook reliably produces the same outcomes, even when those outcomes undermine clinical judgment, due process, or pilot dignity.
Reform We Need
- Transparency in seminar agendas, materials, and outcomes.
- Independent faculty and external reviewers for training curricula.
- Pilot advocacy seats in program design and educational governance.
- Alternatives to single-source training—include independent medical voices.
Call to Action
Lawmakers should require transparency and independent oversight of HIMS training. Without it, “education” functions as indoctrination, not balanced preparation.