Watching the video and listening to them gripe over paper work, I thought of two things. First, the cost of being med-evac’d for a non-covered medical event. You see that with ambulance transport in the US all the time. My mother needed to be transported from the hospital to another facility during the height of the pandemic. There was no other way to do it. It was declined and we were on the hook for $1,600. Air Evacaution by helicopter typically cost much more than the $8,000 Woody put on his card. He, at least, could have covered it.
The second part was why they waited. Getting back to a recompression chamber would have sh!t the pants on a trip they had invested thousands in and spent a lot of time setting up. This is an example of an “undeserved hit.” Woody hadn’t significantly gone outside the dive plan and his computer said he should be okay. How often do you hear about people having a relatively minor fall or seemingly innocuous thing like numbness or tingling only to find out later that it was a heart attack or stroke. My father got his pacemaker only because he had a heart attack while hooked to a machine for an unrelated medical procedure.
At what point after a fall, fender bender, shortness of breath do you realize it isn’t just a a minor annoyance? Our US medical system encourages us to “just sleep it/ walk it off.”