Again, talk to me about it first. I have yet to see one approval yet. Of course, I usually tell peeps that they are ineligible right off.And yes. We’ve seen many doctor’s approvals for well-controlled diabetes. Never had an issue. Yet.
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Again, talk to me about it first. I have yet to see one approval yet. Of course, I usually tell peeps that they are ineligible right off.And yes. We’ve seen many doctor’s approvals for well-controlled diabetes. Never had an issue. Yet.
Your approach is interesting to me, only because I followed it at one time also. It was my counsel and insurance company who advised me to allow the doctor to make the call instead of me.Again, talk to me about it first. I have yet to see one approval yet. Of course, I usually tell peeps that they are ineligible right off.
Well, I'm sure the doctor is a diver and when a quarry diver thinks diving it's way different than on an expedition boat 110 miles from shore is different than in cave country near Gainesvlle is different than a morning 2 tank in Bonaire is different than heading out to some exotic island 12 hours flight to a poophole, like Bikini.Sounds like doctors should discuss with their patients not just baseline fitness to dive but also the possible effect of conditions under which the patient intends to dive, such as on a boat far from medical care, with seasickness, etc.
Mel knew he was diabetic, she didn't snap that he might be in distress and not telling us. I hadn't seen him for longer than I thought normal, I didn't know he was diabetic. Had we communicated earlier, we'd have found out he was out of insulin. I'd have been mad, or furious, but I'd have brought the boat home. Because it isn't worth a dive trip to scare me like that. And when someone is unresponsive, I get scared.So @Wookie If you had known earlier that the cook WAS an insulin dependent diabetic, would you have checked in on him sooner?
My problem isn't so much with a doctor's approval... it's with not knowing about a condition. I want to be prepared, mentally as well as anything else I might need. If I can't make sure that they are going to be safe, I'm siding with "no". Like my cpap. You had to assure me that I had electricity before I got on your boat. I felt it prudent to let you know that I had to have my cpap in order for the rest of the boat to get any sleep and for me to be at my best. I don't have a waiver from my doctor to dive due to being on a cpap. But as the owner of a vessel I'll be on for a few days, you should be privy to that knowledge.
The basic premise wasn't what the lady had, but that she wasn't going to divulge what she had. I have a real problem with that right there.
Depends. If you see your student who answered no to all questions use their inhaler, who is now liable?The form is just for liability, isn't it? Whether you tell the truth or lie is immaterial. Either way the operator is released from liability for accidents that are medically related.
The form is just for liability, isn't it? Whether you tell the truth or lie is immaterial. Either way the operator is released from liability for accidents that are medically related.