Abstract
The medical service of marine aviation of the Navy performs the same functions as are typical for all other navy corps and, at the same time, has tasks specific for aviation. The professional activities of flying personnel pose high requirements to health conditions. The vast and constantly expanding range of factors that influence pilots adversely includes overcharge, noise, vibration, electromagnetic radiation, high temperatures, high intensity of operation, strong cognitive stresses, hypodynamia, monotony etc. They all are prone with making pilot conditions worse and can affect the results of their operation. Maintaining the workability and professional reliability of flight personnel is the most important task of the medical service of Navy aviation corps. In the present time, when aviation engineering is becoming increasingly sophisticated, the regions of dislocation are expanding, and military training is intensifying, the medical provision system of marine aviation of the Navy needs perpetual optimization in order to match these changes.