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#31
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![]() Jimbob wrote: 3) Explain to your chosen AME that you want a regular medical, not a flight medical. Explain also that your interested in a flight med. but would like an evalauation first so you don't ruin your chances for sportpilot. DON'T FILL OUT ANY FAA PAPERWORK UNTIL THE DOC HAS SEEN YOU AND YOUR CHARTS!!!!!! (You may have to pay twice, but it will be worth it) Another option I've heard used is to request a DOT physical (what truck drivers get), which has very similar standards. This allows you to further increase your "plausible deniability" in case any red flags come up. -cwk. |
#32
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"Mike Gaskins" wrote in message
oups.com... I wonder what the following situation would be: Lets say you have a valid medical, go in, and are denied the next one (for some improvable reason, like you failed the eye exam or high blood pressure). You then later return and pass the medical. After the valid one expires, can you then fly Sport Pilot? Yes. The requirement is that you not have been denied for your most recent medical certificate application. Previous denials would not be relevant. All of which is stated very clearly in the relevant FAR, of course. Pete |
#33
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![]() "Mike Gaskins" wrote in message oups.com... I wonder what the following situation would be: Lets say you have a valid medical, go in, and are denied the next one (for some improvable reason, like you failed the eye exam or high blood pressure). You then later return and pass the medical. After the valid one expires, can you then fly Sport Pilot? It would really bite to not have the option if someone failed an eye exam or something 20 years ago because they didn't know they needed glasses yet. It basically boils down to how your last medical expired. If it expired and wasn't denied or revoked your good to go. So in the case you outline above you are OK. Another example would be Joe Blow gets a waiver for a condition and then lets the medical and the waiver attached to it expire he is still good to go. |
#34
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![]() wrote Another option I've heard used is to request a DOT physical (what truck drivers get), which has very similar standards. This allows you to further increase your "plausible deniability" in case any red flags come up. You have heard wrong. The DOT physical is laughable, in comparison to the FAA physical. -- Jim in NC |
#35
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Doug S wrote:
So, after a few years of putting it off (actually..."after a few years of saving enough $$$"), I decided I want to get a private pilot cert. Welllll...from the time that I first wanted to do that (about 10 years ago) until now, I've had some changes in my medical status, which will *definitely* require a waiver. The question to the group is, what are my chances? In other words, I don't want to go through the hassle of getting all my records together if there's not much of a chance I will receive the waiver. On the other hand, if people think that the waiver is probable, what steps should I take? Should I get the records together first and then take the medical? See, I don't want to even start taking instruction (and spend the $$) if there's not much of a chance that I'll be able to get the cert... In a nutshell: 31 year old otherwise healthy male (6'3" 190 lbs). [--snip--] So currently, my medical status is: 1) Fatty liver: Stay away from products containing Acetomenaphin , and also alcohol. 2) Borderline high cholestorol: My GP wants me on Lipitor, but due to the liver side effects I am wary. I have not started taking the drug, but am first trying to lower it through diet and exercise ![]() 3) History of migraines. Controlled by acute intervention medications. No attack in the past four months, could be related to the drug switching. 4) Osteoarthritis in the knees. Controlled by Daypro with no discernable side effects except upset stomach if I don't take it with food. What do y'all think, is it possible, or just a pipe dream? After having just gone through FAA Medical Certification Hell, here's a couple of thoughts, tips, etc. I can't say if it's possible or not, but hopefully I can give you an idea of what's involved. It's been a pain in the butt for me, but it's well worth it to be able to fly an airplane by myself. * Start this process as soon as you even think you might possibly contemplate take a lesson. I started the medical certification process at the same time I started taking lessons. It took me almost a year to get my medical certification (special issuance actually) and I've been wasting some time in my flying becuase I couldn't solo until recently. (On the up side, my landings have been really good becuase my CFI and I have been doing *lots* of pattern work waiting for my medical clearance). * Talk to an AME (Airman Medical Examiner) ASAP. He/She will be able to tell you what your chances are. Just be honest with them and they should tell you what to do to make it happen (if you're in the SF Bay Area, I would wholehartedly recommend my AME). * Join and work with the AOPA. They have lots of medical resources on their Web site. You can request that their medical people talk with the FAA to provide updates so you have some visibility into the process, which otherwise is like dropping an application into a black hole and hoping it reappears as a medical certification three months later. * Be prepared to work with your doctor(s) to provide *lots* of documentation. And make sure to provide it by their deadlines. In my case, I have Type-II Diabetes (orally controlled), hypertension, a history of kidney stones and a family history of heart disease. I had to provide: 1) a note from my doctor with a description of my current diabetes and high blood pressure control, a statement to the effect that the kidney stones were a one-time occurence, and a list of all the medications I'm currently taking, with any side effects (I don't have any). 2) lab reports with my current HbA1C results (indicates overall glucose control). 3) a rather detailed eye examination (my optometest had never before done some of the tests that they asked for). 4) results of a a resting electrocardiogram (ECG) 5) a maximal stress ECG I had multiple issues, so I probably had to provide more documentation than most, but just be prepared. * If you get your medical certification, it will probably be issued under "special issuance" which means that it's not valid for the normal 3 years. You will probably have to provide additional information on your condition on a shorter basis. For example, I need to provide information on my diabetes every 12 months and on my hypertension every 24 months, in addition to my three-year physicals. Someone once told me that the FAA will issue a medical certification if you are warm and standing upright. I don't know if that's true or not, but I know that I was worried that I wouldn't get mine and I'd have to give up flying even before I started. As it turns out, I didn't have a problem getting the certification and I've got most of the FAA's "hot button" health issues (diabetes, hypertension, kidney stones). -- Bryan |
#36
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On 11 Jul 2005 10:07:12 -0700, "Mike Gaskins"
wrote: You then later return and pass the medical. After the valid one expires, can you then fly Sport Pilot? Isn't that a special-issuance medical? It scrubs the record clean. -- all the best, Dan Ford email (put Cubdriver in subject line) Warbird's Forum: www.warbirdforum.com Piper Cub Forum: www.pipercubforum.com the blog: www.danford.net In Search of Lost Time: www.readingproust.com |
#37
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![]() Thanks for the story, Bryan. Wish I'd read it when I first decided to get a certificate. I was 66 at the time and likewise had to jump through hoops. To your caveats about the FAA medical system, I'd add this one: some conditions can come up to bite you years later. After I passed my third biennial medical exam (which was done in the doc's office, like the previous one), I got a letter from the FAA telling me that for my next exam I must bring a narrative history of my asthma condition and treatment. I was using an inhaler for exercise-induced asthma at the time of my first medical, and still am, but for six years it was never an issue. Now it is. Who knows? Perhaps somebody at the FAA was shuffling through old records. Or perhaps somebody, somewhere, crashed an airplane while having an asthma attack, and the FAA did a computer search for everyone on asthma meds. -- all the best, Dan Ford email (put Cubdriver in subject line) Warbird's Forum: www.warbirdforum.com Piper Cub Forum: www.pipercubforum.com the blog: www.danford.net In Search of Lost Time: www.readingproust.com |
#38
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Bryan Mason wrote:
Someone once told me that the FAA will issue a medical certification if you are warm and standing upright. I don't know if that's true or not, but I know that I was worried that I wouldn't get mine and I'd have to give up flying even before I started. As it turns out, I didn't have a problem getting the certification and I've got most of the FAA's "hot button" health issues (diabetes, hypertension, kidney stones). Wrong on both notes: the FAA is considerably pickier than just having a warm upright body and you DID have a problem. Not having a problem would be the more usual experience of going to see the examiner and walking out of his office about $80 poorer but with a brand new medical in your wallet. Clearly, that did not happen with you. Yours took a year or so. Which is to say that your perserverance paid off and for that I congratulate you. Many lesser beings would have given up. -- Mortimer Schnerd, RN VE |
#39
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On Sun, 10 Jul 2005 12:26:26 -0400, "Doug S"
wrote: There is obviously a bright red warning light flashing at you. Heed it. Mike Weller |
#40
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Michelle P wrote:
Three years off medication and no symptoms of depression will be the big hold up at this point. Michelle Doug S wrote: So currently, my medical status is: 1) Fatty liver: Stay away from products containing Acetomenaphin , and also alcohol. 2) Borderline high cholestorol: My GP wants me on Lipitor, but due to the liver side effects I am wary. I have not started taking the drug, but am first trying to lower it through diet and exercise ![]() 3) History of migraines. Controlled by acute intervention medications. No attack in the past four months, could be related to the drug switching. 4) Osteoarthritis in the knees. Controlled by Daypro with no discernable side effects except upset stomach if I don't take it with food. What do y'all think, is it possible, or just a pipe dream? Thanks... Seems like 3 months off the meds does it. I had a deferral for depression (should have said dysthymia which was the true diagnosis) and had to go through the hoops for years. Finally I had a great AME who said "losing 200 lbs of unneeded weight (refering to my X) sure makes things better" and wrote such to the FAA. Now I have no problems with my medical and a husband who flys! Margy Bereavement; Dysthmic; or Minor Depression All Submit all pertinent medical information and clinical status report If stable, resolved, no associated disturbance of thought, no recurrent episodes, and; a). psychotropic medication(s) used for less than 6 months and discontinued for at least 3 months - Issue b). No use of psychotropic medications - Issue Otherwise - Requires FAA Decision |
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