
When Captain John Hoyte first became a BAe 146 pilot in 1989 he put his extreme exhaustion and chronic fatigue down to the anti-social hours as he was flying permanent nights. At first he assumed this was normal.
Gradually he began to notice other symptoms
Bright lights would "jump around" and he found it hard to focus, his speech was sometimes slurred, and he had difficulty with memory and thought processing. The overall effect was of being permanently intoxicated, but without the alcohol.
Regarded by his friends and family as a cheerful and equable person he began to suffer from mild depression and confusion. With a growing family and worried about keeping his job, he dismissed his symptoms as an unwelcome side effect and carried on flying for another sixteen years.
Time to stop
By 2004 he was feeling very unwell and his symptoms were increasingly affecting his off-duty life. Many pilots have to’ face the day’ when they are unable to continue to fly - both for their own sake and out of a duty to their passengers.
In August 2004, Captain Hoyte elected not to fly a Public Transport flight with passengers to Salzburg in bad weather in the Austrian Alps due to feeling very unwell with increasing neurological symptoms. By now he felt himself to be an actual flight safety hazard.
He took three months sick leave during which no mention was made by any of the specialist Doctors of the possibility of his illness being caused by contaminated cabin air or organophosphate chemical poisoning. He was surprisingly diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder or PTSD.
Back to flying
Capt Hoyte reluctantly returned to flying, but like many other pilots, only part time in an effort to limit his chronic fatigue and ongoing neurological symptoms. Once again he elected not to fly in June 2005. This was to be his last flight in a BAe 146.
Grounded
It was at this time that Capt Hoyte became aware of many other pilots who had the same neurological symptoms; including one pilot who had been grounded in 2000 by the CAA due to suspected organophosphate poisoning as he was deemed to be a ‘flight safety risk’.
Testing
Capt Tristan Loraine & Capt Susan Michaelis of GCAQE would be his sole source of assistance and first suggested that he may be suffering from ‘Aerotoxic Syndrome’ in June 2006.








