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Old 01-09-2016 | 08:16 AM
  #16  
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slaveship
Line Dawg
 
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 150
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From: 777 Captain LCA
Default Thanks for all of the Info

Thank you all for your info and experiences. For others who might be out and want to come back, here is my experience. Heart bypass 16 months ago, plus diabetes. I was put on insulin at time of surgery. FAA requires a 6 month wait after heart surgery. Follow on testing requires nuclear stress test and a heart cath. For diabetes, FAA requires 90 days off of insulin and demonstrate good control of glucose. Easy right? What is so critical is the doctors who are treating you. I hunted for the best and never relented until I found the best. New endocronologist told me I should have never been put on insulin. Pancreas is fine. Thankfully I have no heart damage. It was all arterial. Makes a huge difference with the FAA. Anthem BC/BS will pay for all testing because it is medically necessary. Once you have arterial disease, you always have arterial disease. The right doctor and the right language is key for insurance. Diabetes is at such an epidemic level and with so many medicines on the market, the FAA is still dozens of years behind. No surprise. I went thru a period of time that I had just given in to never flying again, almost a depressive state, but please never relent to that. It takes alot of leg work to find the right doctors. Dont accept those that could care less about what you want. Believe me they are out there. Also, FAA AME's all have different opinions. Hunt for the right one. One more thing. I have dealt with ALPA aeromedical, private consultants that have been on the FAA cardio board, and Harvey Watt. Forget about all of them. Read the FAA requirements to get back to work and work directly with your doctors. Build you own package to submit. Harvey Watt will do this for you and QC it thru the entire process. And they do it for free. Actually they are paid by the company. Everyone else, not ALPA, wants thousands of dollars to help you. ALPA is our advocate but they are large and bureaucratic. The docs give great info but just didn't have the warm fuzzy. Many of you may have different experiences and it is what it is.

God willing, I will get back to work in April. One last bit of advice. If you don't personally adjust your lifestyle regarding diet and exercise, with the sedentary nature of our job and the really healthy catering, chances are nothing will change. The FAA's guidelines for diabetic control are a death sentence. You can fly with hemoglobin A1c levels that are dangerous. Don't accept just being below the limit. Our grandchildren, children, wives and family are more important.

Sorry for the soap box but wanted to thank those who took the time to respond. If you want more details, please PM me and I will be happy to call you to discuss.

And another soap box thing. Our company and union disability benefits are amazing. If you don't have ALPA's LTD plan, get it. It's tax free and saved my family from financial ruin. Nuff said.

Fly safe. Hope you be doing the same again soon. Cheers.
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