SapphireMind
Contributor
I'm a PADI instructor. If I'm teaching I must ask for that medical form, but all I need (per PADI) is the signature on page 2. The only purpose of the YES/NO responses is to tell me if I need the signed page 2. Some posters on here insist otherwise, but they refuse to check with PADI and insist on their own interpretation of the form. I am not a medical professional and do not even want to know what the YES answers are. I'd be really upset if someone answered all NOs to avoid having to get the doctor's signature, and I hope people don't do that, no matter what some of the misinformed ScubaBoard advice is. I want my students to be safe, I don't want to be sued, and I want others in the class to avoid the stress of a medical event during their class. It is quite rude, selfish, and rather sociopathic to say you are not going to answer YES when you should,
Would you accept a doctor's signature from 2 years prior? 6 months prior? Does it need to be immediately prior to diving? This is the problem with requiring that doctor's signature. How many physicals do you reasonably expect me to have for a condition that is unchanging and well-controlled? How many times should I be charged by my doctor (because some charge to fill out forms) to have that signed?
It's not sociopathic to not say yes, when you have already been cleared for diving, but each individual requires a new form. It would be sociopathic to have a condition that would preclude you from safe diving and to hide that from everyone. There's a difference between those scenarios.
Edited to add:
And while I can't be my own medical provider, I am medical and would just my own signature be sufficient? I would have no issue to having it needing to be signed by the participant as affirming they have discussed the issues with their physician and have been found to be fit to dive. That allows discussion on the topic of medical conditions, allows for people to be honest on their forms and they are then assuming responsibility for their own safety by affirming that they have done due diligence by speaking with medical providers about conditions.