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Germanwings Pilot Tragedy Prompts Calls for Mental Health Reform

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French investigators are calling for mental health reform after news that a German pilot who flew a jetliner into a mountain in the Alps last year was on anti-depressants.

Andreas Lubitz, 27, was the co-pilot of the plane. He locked his captain out of the cockpit and flew Germanwings Flight 9525 into the mountainside almost exactly a year ago.
    
All 150 people on board were killed.
    
Lubitz had mental health and physical problems, and consulted dozens of doctors.
    
One of them prescribed anti-depressants, including one whose side effects can include suicidal tendencies.
    
He didn't report any of that to the airline -- and neither did the doctors because of Germany's strict medical confidentiality laws.
    
Now French investigators looking into the crash say those laws must change.    

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