pauldw
Contributor
Stop saying that. ("Guarantee")Yes, there are steps to guarantee...
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Stop saying that. ("Guarantee")Yes, there are steps to guarantee...
Well, not exactly up to individual instructors or shops to decide...Thanks to @JackD342 - I have a satisfactory answer to my OP.
I remain certain that 99% of instructors will accept a signed medical statement from an MD which will trump everything else - standards be darned. Ultimately, it’s simple - decision is up to an instructor to accept a student or not. If the instructor harbors any doubts, tell the student to complete all the questions then decide.
Well, not exactly up to individual instructors or shops to decide...
I had also asked PADI to include a rationale in that re-emphasis of Medical Statement standards, and a bit of an explanation of what the risks/hazards/liabilities would be of not gathering and storing the paperwork as described. I wish that had been included, but just because it wasn't does NOT mean that there might not be consequences to making up your own paperwork standard if the s**t hit the fan.
At the least if something were to happen, (think random lawsuit), you do not want any example(s) available (material to the issue at hand or not) that can demonstrate that you are in the habit of picking and choosing standards which standards you follow. It can add to the difficulty of a successful defense.
So yeah, anyone can do anything they like, until they are called on it and find out that it was a bad idea. Trying to impose/rationalize your personal opinion of what you think a standard should be onto the actuality of what it actually is, should be avoided. Worse yet is encouraging others to do the same and presenting it as okay.
Well, that certainly helps enforce the requirement. But there will always be a paper based option rather than a mandatory digital system. At least as long as people and operations on the other side of the "digital divide" are still diving.Jack, I think that OLPC 3.0 will take care of this “issue”. All of our students now have to complete forms online - handwritten-student forms are going extinct in PADI land.
OLPC 3 does not allow students to omit answers and a YES automatically triggers a required medical clearance.
Are you suggesting that an instructor could teach a new OW student, the very first time they are taken to open water, to ingest cake frosting while underwater? On behalf of all instructors, I'm flattered that you believe this would be reasonable... but we do have our limits.
"Guarantee" is an awfully strong word. Are you willing to bet your career as a physician on this kind of "guarantee"?
There is a simple solution: you can become a scuba instructor. You would be the perfect instructor to specialize in students with Type 1 diabetes (and maybe you could also take some with Type 2.) In the meantime, please try to understand that those of us tasked with the responsibility to keep our students safe while we have no real experience with the symptoms, effects or treatment of Type 1 diabetes will often decide that the safest option for those students is to not allow them to join our class. You can call it discrimination if you like, but it's discriminating in favor of safety.
Well, that certainly helps enforce the requirement. But there will always be a paper based option rather than a mandatory digital system. At least as long as people and operations on the other side of the "digital divide" are still diving.
Stop saying that. ("Guarantee")
If you're too ignorant of medical conditions to even identify the symptoms, I have absolutely no idea how you have the ego to determine you are knowledgeable enough to overrule an actual doctor's conclusion that their patient is safe to dive. I'm happy to not dive with any person (much less instructor) who's ego is so big as to decide that their complete lack of medical knowledge is more valid than an actual doctor's opinion regarding that doctor's patient's health and abilities. I can only imagine that a massive ego or complete fear of the unknown would be responsible for feeling so entitled as to over-rule an MD's medical opinion as a layperson without medical training, and I don't want to dive with anyone that is either that egotistical or that fearful.
You can hide behind the guise of safety, but the safety was determined by the doctor. But really you're just being the person who is too scared of what they don't understand to bother doing their job as far as I can tell.
If you're too ignorant of medical conditions to even identify the symptoms, I have absolutely no idea how you have the ego to determine you are knowledgeable enough to overrule an actual doctor's conclusion that their patient is safe to dive.