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Packing for a Healthy Vacation
By Daniel DeNoon
WebMD Feature
Reviewed By Louise Chang, MD
No matter where you're traveling, one thing should go with you, stay with you, and come home with you: your health.
While travel, whether domestic or foreign, broadens one's mental horizons and refreshes a zest for life, it is also fraught with chances for illness and injury. So the best advice is the Boy Scout motto: Be Prepared. Follow these four steps.
If this sounds like you, try something new this vacation. Using a calendar for the month before you leave, plan just one task for every day. Sure, there will be some last-minute details, but you'll have so much more done.
If you're traveling to another country, you'll want to take extra precautions:
- Carry prescription medicines in their original, labeled bottles.
- Your medicine list should include the generic name of each drug. That's because some drugs have different brand names in other countries. (All drugs, even those not sold over the counter, have generic names. If you don't know the generic names of your medicines, ask your pharmacist.)
- The U.S. State Department advises travelers to check with the foreign embassy of the country they are visiting to make sure any required medications they carry are not considered to be illegal narcotics.
- If you have pre-existing medical problems, it's wise to carry a letter from your doctor describing the condition and any medicines used to treat it.
If your insurance does not offer coverage, you may want to purchase supplemental insurance that does. Even if your insurer covers "customary and reasonable" hospital costs overseas, few companies pay for medical evacuation back to the U.S. The U.S. State Department estimates the cost at "$10,000 and up."
Note that Medicare does not cover hospital or medical costs outside the U.S. The American Association of Retired Persons has information for senior citizens about foreign medical care coverage with Medicare supplement plans.
Source: WebMD.com: “Packing for a Healthy Vacation”
©2008 WebMD, Inc. All rights reserved.
Medically Updated Jan. 25, 2008
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