If you are traveling in the U.S.by yourself or other seniors there are some precautions to take. As an older person, you want to be sure you carry a prescription for your glasses if you need them. Glasses do get broken. You also want to be sure you have refills for any prescriptions you take. If you become ill on an airplane there may not be a physician on board. The airlines are somewhat better in the past about training their staff about what to do if someone becomes ill. I hope they are better, too, about having more medications available for physicians to use than they did in the past. I have responded to calls for a physician several times when I was flying. One time it was necessary for me to have the pilots land the airplane mid-way across the country because there was no medication I could use to stop a man from having seizures. From his luggage, we decided that he was using a stimulant and had been traveling for several days. I was accustomed to treating seizures in children, but there was nothing in the airplane medical chest I could use.
Most, and I hope all airlines have defibrillators on board. I am told the staff are trained to use these. I have found that some of the flight attendants in the past were quite difficult. One flight attendant insisted I show her my medical license. Would she had done that for a male doctor? Another one asked me if I wanted a glass of wine as I was listening to a person's chest and taking his blood pressure. Amazing!
My other concern, if you are traveling by car or bus, and become ill is about using urgent care facilities. Not all have a physician on-call. I have seen seen some grave mistakes happen when a non-physician tries to treat a patient. One teenager who had muscular dystrophy, was told he had diabetes and the nurse wanted to give him insulin. The parents called me and traveled for several hours so I could see the youth. A chest X-ray showed he had lobar pneumonia! He did well with the right antibiotics.
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