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Can you think of a more miserable travel experience than subjecting yourself to being on an aircraft for 17 hours straight?
Well, one person has managed to make a 17-hour nonstop flight all the more unbearable. A man on Qantas’ ultra long-haul flight from Perth (PER) to London (LHR) was found to not have moved from his seat once during the 17-hour flight.
Researchers from the University of Sydney were conducting a study on the effects of jet lag during long-haul flights. They outfitted passengers with devices attached to wrists and thighs to measure their movements during the flight, but found that one man didn’t move for the entire journey.
”The one thing we couldn’t believe was how little moved. One subject took zero steps,” Professor Stephen Simpson of the University of Sydney told the New Zealand Herald.
Surprised researchers checked if the equipment were faulty, but Simpson said it appeared to be working properly.
That means the man stayed in his seat for the entirety of the second-longest flight in the world. It’s unclear how a person could go that long without using the restroom or stretching, although the passenger was seated in business class, which probably helped. He would have been in one of Qantas’ lie-flat suites on its Boeing 787-9.
The initial pilot survey of 20 passengers on the Kangaroo route actually gave the Dreamliner high marks for its ability to combat jet lag. On a scale of one to eight, passengers’ average rating was only a 2.2 out of eight for jet-lag severity. The 787 Dreamliner was crafted to dampen some of jet lag’s effects — its cabin’s pressured to 6,000 feet and holds humidity better, helping minimize dehydration that occurs on flights.
Simpson said that those who tried to fight jet lag by repeatedly moving during the flight ended up feeling worse by the end of their travels. Participants who led healthy lives and kept to their sleep cycles were more likely to feel better when they landed.
Source: thepointsguy.com