Sixty second review

{{Short description|Technique used by flight attendants}}

{{one source|date=January 2024}}

The sixty second review (also known as a silent review or mental review) is a technique used by flight attendants during the critical phases of flight to focus and prepare them for a sudden emergency.{{cite magazine |date=May–June 2002 |title=Silence is golden |url=https://www.casa.gov.au/fsa/2002/may/38_39.pdf |url-status=dead |magazine=Flight Safety Australia |publisher= |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080807191217/http://casa.gov.au/fsa/2002/may/38_39.pdf |archive-date=7 August 2008 }}

Use

How the silent review is performed varies according to different airlines, but the principles and the desired result are the same throughout. Just prior to take off, and from gear down to landing, flight attendants will be in their jumpseats in a semi-brace position performing their silent review. This can either be a structured set of questions that they mentally go over, or a series of suggested questions that the attendant can think about as they observe the cabin.{{citation needed|date=January 2024}}

Structured silent reviews typically use mnemonics, one such being "OLDABC":

  • {{big|O}}peration of exits
  • {{big|L}}ocation of emergency equipment
  • {{big|D}}rills (brace for impact)
  • {{big|A}}ble bodied passengers, selected and used by flight attendants to assist in an evacuation, typically by remaining at the bottom of the escape slide.
  • {{big|B}}race position
  • {{big|C}}ommands (such as "heads down – stay down", "undo seatbelts and come this way")

References

{{reflist}}

Category:Aviation safety

{{Aviation-stub}}