LowHrsMan
Filing Flight Plan
So I finally got my 3rd class HIMS SI medical in August after 15 months of back and forth with the FAA. HIMS is required for SSRI usage only; no DUI, substance abuse, etc. I also have SI for loss of kidney function (stable), history of DVTs (10+ yrs ago), warfarin (due to DVTs), and ulcerative colitis. SSRI dosage and treatment has been stable for 10+ years.
My 3rd class expires end of Nov. I can either go to my HIMS AME and get 6 more months, which is doable but a pain. My psychiatrist prescribing the SSRI needs to review my complete FAA medical file (last time it took 2+ months to get that from OKC!), which the psychiatrist is luke warm about, and then send a report to the AME every 6 months. Normally I only see the psychiatrist yearly. Then there's the annual reports from the kidney doc, GI doc, and primary doc for the warfarin / INR results, and so on and so on. Then there's repeating the neuro assessment every 2 years. In short, a lot of stuff.
Or I can just switch to basic med once my 3rd class expires in about 6 weeks.
Is there any reason I should NOT just to switch to basic med and be done with it?
The only reasons I can think are: 1) flying outside the U.S. requires a 3rd class, and 2) getting a another SI if a new disqualifying medical condition were to arise might be much more problematic or impossible.
LowHrsMan
My 3rd class expires end of Nov. I can either go to my HIMS AME and get 6 more months, which is doable but a pain. My psychiatrist prescribing the SSRI needs to review my complete FAA medical file (last time it took 2+ months to get that from OKC!), which the psychiatrist is luke warm about, and then send a report to the AME every 6 months. Normally I only see the psychiatrist yearly. Then there's the annual reports from the kidney doc, GI doc, and primary doc for the warfarin / INR results, and so on and so on. Then there's repeating the neuro assessment every 2 years. In short, a lot of stuff.
Or I can just switch to basic med once my 3rd class expires in about 6 weeks.
Is there any reason I should NOT just to switch to basic med and be done with it?
The only reasons I can think are: 1) flying outside the U.S. requires a 3rd class, and 2) getting a another SI if a new disqualifying medical condition were to arise might be much more problematic or impossible.
LowHrsMan