Exactly. That's not surprising.That would be my hope as well, but I know a number of young CFIs that are well trained as pilots but don't seem to be aware of some of the medical pitfalls since they weren't personally impacted by them.
Exactly. That's not surprising.That would be my hope as well, but I know a number of young CFIs that are well trained as pilots but don't seem to be aware of some of the medical pitfalls since they weren't personally impacted by them.
Bear in mind that there's no question about whether you were ever on Ritalin. The question is about what you were diagnosed with. So that's what you need to know, or don't.I remember I was on it. But I can’t recall for how long I remember always fighting with my mom about not taking it and would always throw them in the toilet. I was super active as a kid, skateboarding, bmx, fishing everything outdoors ofc I didn’t want to focus in school I wanted to be outside.
I know I have steps to overcome and medical records I have to dig up I just want to do this the right way even if I find “no proof” I also don’t want an accident to happen where they find evidence I was taking medication for ADD
Bear in mind that there's no question about whether you were ever on Ritalin. The question is about what you were diagnosed with. So that's what you need to know, or don't.
There's an underlying problem there. It's not always an accurate diagnosis, i.e. you may not have actually had.postive it was ADD
There's an underlying problem there. It's not always an accurate diagnosis, i.e. you may not have actually had.
So the FAA is willing to accept documentation that you don't have it or anything like it now, but their suspicion isn't going to go away on its own. You'll need to provide convincing evidence that you don't have it now - which is doable but usually expensive.
As a retired M.D. I'm a little embarrassed with how "casual" doctors were (and still are) in their coding of diagnosis codes just to get the maximal reimbursement benefit from an insurance carrier. People in your situation as just caught in the crossfire.
The good news is that it should be a one-time expense.I’ve heard about the expense, but if I have to do it to make this go away I’ll definitely feel 100x better about going through all the hoops.
I don't have kids but when I was a teen prescriptions were written out in my name handed to my parents to get filled. The bottle of pills had my name on it not my parents. I never heard of someone prescribing medication to parents and not the patient.
My question was related to the fact that if someone was never prescribed anything possible they were never diagnosed which would have made a difference. The OP didn't mention before if they were ever prescribed. Now that the OP said they were prescribed they have to jump though the FAA hoops.
Submit a new app with a different email. As long as you haven’t seen an AME yet the original one will never see the light of day. If the suspension was over 10 years ago it’s likely not an issue…unless there was alcohol involved. Depending how long ago 13-15 years old was for you, those records may not even exist anymore. I would think your primary care physician would have any pertinent info/diagnosis’. I’d start there and then fill out a new MedXpress.
What's bad about the advice? The context was that the person wanted to provide required information that had been previously omitted, on a form that had not yet been submitted to an AME.THIS is incredibly bad advice...
I'd be happy to help, along with the other partners in my firm. We do consultations free, especially for folks getting into the industry.
Let me know if we can assist,
Jacob
AeroAlliance Consulting
THIS is incredibly bad advice...
I'd be happy to help, along with the other partners in my firm. We do consultations free, especially for folks getting into the industry.
Let me know if we can assist,
Jacob
AeroAlliance Consulting