Posts Tagged ‘elder travel’

CareGivers and Christmas – Seniors Travel to Enjoy Time With Families

Home For The Holidays—Phoenix Travel Companions Assist With Elder Travel

By Captain Gary Bates, Trans World Airlines retired

In this article:

Travel becomes difficult for an aging population

Booking a flight and getting to the plane

During the flight and arriving at the destination

How Travel Companions Assist with Elder Travel

Customizing Travel for Seniors

How Travel Companions Can Get You There When The Family Can’t

Holidays are a special time, filled with memories of the past and lots of family fun. Getting the family together becomes more and more difficult as we age. Holiday travel is the heaviest and most confusing time for anyone and especially difficult for elder travel. Seniors separated from family members come to a point where it is just too much hassle and even unsafe to try to travel to family gatherings by themselves.

As an aging population, and travel becoming more high tech, senior travel becomes an even greater challenge. Seniors stop traveling because of a variety of factors.

  • Mobility difficulty, walkers, wheelchairs or just moving slowly
  • Anxiety
  • Impaired judgment and trusting strangers
  • Difficulty seeing and hearing at airports
  • Loss of balance
  • Personal assistance needed during travel
  • Confusion during the security process
  • Handling baggage
  • Possible flight cancelations
  • Being forced to stay overnight at a connection airport
  • Rebooking missed connections
  • Vulnerability to theft

Booking a flight and getting to the plane

Air travel today is fast, efficient and safe unless you are impaired by some of the above problems. When we bring grandma home for Christmas or Hanukkah, we can find a flight and book space for her. Maybe she can get help getting to the departure airport, but the steps in getting to her seat on the airplane can be daunting. Will she check her bags at the curb or at the ticket counter? Can she navigate escalators and long walkways with a cane or walker? Can she arrange for a wheelchair? Can she work the credit card scanner to get a boarding pass and get through security? The potential for problems are endless.

During the flight and arriving at the destination

All too often seniors are sent on flights alone where they need a lot of assistance. They can become confused or embarrassed by situations that you or I would not think twice about. Simple things like handling a broken seat, getting a drink of water of navigating the lavatory and toilet can be overwhelming to someone who is confused, can’t hear or is anxious. Seniors frequently say, “I don’t want to be a bother to the flight attendant”, or “they are probably too busy” so I’ll just put up with my problem. Over the years I have seen many wet seat cushions because of this kind of thinking. Now the senior feels embarrassed and looses the joy of the journey.

When a flight is canceled at a connection point or worse yet, is diverted to an alternate airport, confusion reigns. The passenger lines are long and tempers can flare. Is there another flight today or are we getting a voucher for a hotel and meals? This is no place for a senior alone who is a little confused and slow to start with.

I once had a flight to Baltimore which diverted to Pittsburg because Baltimore closed in snow. Because of delays it was after midnight at Pittsburg and most of the airport staff had gone home. Here we were with a plane load of people including children traveling alone and some elders who were lost and waiting for help and direction. Imagine being stuck at an airport that is mostly closed in the winter and in the snow.

Our flight crew rose to the occasion finding hotel rooms, and arranging vans to the hotel.

Now, for the unaccompanied children (even up to 16 years old) and elders. After arranging for rooms, the flight crew, flight attendants and pilots, helped make phone calls to the worried parents of the children and families of the stranded seniors in Baltimore.

Some seniors have cell phones, however they can become confused with poor reception, retrieving messages, or just keeping it charged. Cell phones can become a false sense of security for the senior and the family at home.

All ended well and everyone got to their destination the next day. If it were not for this flight crew going way above and beyond their duties, the evening would not have ended as well as it did.

Travel Companions Assist with Elder Travel

Phoenix Travel Companions are available to assist seniors to the airport and onto the plane, travel with them all the way to the destination, or provide caregiving for the entire trip.

In the problem areas listed above I have seen Professional Travel Companions

Smoothly and professionally handle everything for their elder travel clients.

Beginning with planning the trip, to avoiding potential problems on board, to arrival at the destination, Travel Companions can handle everything.

  • Trip planning
  • Transport to the airport including wheelchair lift vans
  • Navigating the airport, check-in, getting through security faster, restroom stops,

boarding the plane early to allow extra time

  • Assistance on the plane, appropriate seats, meals and drinks, help with the lavatory and personal needs, deplaning at destination
  • Navigate through arrival airport, claiming baggage and arranging transportation

Customizing Travel for Seniors

It is important for your trip planning to be appropriate for elder travel.

Some considerations for senior travel planning:

  • Planning travel on less busy days to minimize confusion and delays, travel a day or two early for a more relaxing flight
  • Appropriate packing, what should we have in carry on bag?
  • A comfortable place to wait for the flight
  • The best time of day for departure and arrival
  • The number of stops and allowing connection time
  • Seat selection on board, no emergency rows, choose isle or window, bulkhead rows may help or hurt, the last row seat in a cabin may not recline
  • Meals, snacks and drinks on the way, proper hydration is critical
  • Medication access and reminders
  • Supplemental oxygen may make all the difference at altitude
  • Mark bags to easily recognize bags at baggage claim
  • Planning transfer to destination on arrival
  • Enjoying the rest of the vacation

Travel Companions Can Get You There When The Family Can’t

Sometimes the time off from work for family members is limited. Elder Travel Companions can handle the traveling so that the family can spend all their time together for the holidays. If you just have 3 or 4 days off from work for a holiday, you don’t have to spend your precious time traveling. Let your traveling caregiver bring your elder family member to you ahead of time so you can spend all of your days off enjoying family time together at home.

Your Phoenix travel companion can provide transportation services, or provide caregiving for the senior for the entire time. This may be very helpful for weddings or family reunions where the family is pressed for time and need help with caregiving. The idea of a family reunion is for everyone to relax and enjoy each others company.

For an Elder Travel Assistant contact Care To Go at 800-818-0407 or at www.caretogotravel.com

Phoenix Travel Companion Notes That Shoes May Soon Be Left On At Airport TSA Screening

Airport Check-in: Scanner would let fliers keep shoes on at security

Removing shoes at and airport security check point has gotten routine for the regular travelers, but remains a hustle for elder travelers. When traveling with an Elder Travel Companion, removing shoes may not be such a big deal as traveling alone.

New shoe scanners may eliminate the need to remove shoes altogether, Yea!

Now your Travel Companion Caregiver can help you with all the other items being searched.

By Ben Mutzabaugh, USA TODAY

From USA TODAY’s Airport Check-in column: A company vying to sell airport shoe scanners has finished its "trial" at Indianapolis International, collecting results from 3,000 travelers who volunteered to try its machine in the lobby.

Morpho Detection says its data-collection experiment, which ended in late July, showed its scanner can process more than 300 customers an hour. Travelers still had to remove their shoes at the airport’s security checkpoints.

Morpho says it’ll use the data to fine-tune machines and submit it to the Transportation Security Administration.

TSA wants to revive the idea of allowing travelers to keep their shoes on at checkpoints and has announced its plans to buy 100 shoe scanners by next year. About a dozen companies hope to bid for the business. — Roger Yu

 

When you could use some assistance while traveling, try a Travel Companion from Care-To-Go.  In Home CareGivers are also available from Care-To-Go in the Phoenix area.

Backlash grows against full-body scanners in airports By Phoenix Travel Companion

Backlash grows against full-body scanners in airports

Elder Travel Companion Phoenix azAs the TSA  airports try to get a handle on quick and efficient scanning at security checkpoints, new machines may not be the answer.

Our Elder Travel Companions from Phoenix and Scottsdale report longer security delays and frazzled nerves at full body scan airports.  Our seniors in wheel chairs are not subject to this screening and will continue to be checked as usual.  The Travel Companion CareGiver can be a great asset in transiting airport security.

 

By Gary Stoller, USA TODAY

Opposition to new full-body imaging machines to screen passengers and the government’s deployment of them at most major airports is growing.

Many frequent fliers complain they’re time-consuming or invade their privacy. The world’s airlines say they shouldn’t be used for primary security screening. And questions are being raised about possible effects on passengers’ health.

"The system takes three to five times as long as walking through a metal detector," says Phil Bush of Atlanta, one of many fliers on USA TODAY’s Road Warriors panel who oppose the machines. "This looks to be yet another disaster waiting to happen."

BODY SCANNERS: Concerns about privacy and health set off debate

The machines — dubbed by some fliers as virtual strip searches — were installed at many airports in March after a Christmas Day airline bombing attempt. The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) has spent more than $80 million for about 500 machines, including 133 now at airports. It plans to install about 1,000 by the end of next year.

The machines are running into complaints and questions here and overseas:

•The International Air Transport Association, which represents 250 of the world’s airlines, including major U.S. carriers, says the TSA lacks "a strategy and a vision" of how the machines fit into a comprehensive checkpoint security plan. "The TSA is putting the cart before the horse," association spokesman Steve Lott says.

•Security officials in Dubai said this month they wouldn’t use the machines because they violate "personal privacy," and information about their "side effects" on health isn’t known.

•Last month, the European Commission said in a report that "a rigorous scientific assessment" of potential health risks is needed before machines are deployed there. It also said screening methods besides the new machines should be used on pregnant women, babies, children and people with disabilities.

The U.S. Government Accountability Office said in October that the TSA was deploying the machines without fully testing them and assessing whether they could detect "threat items" concealed on various parts of the body. And in March, the office said it "remains unclear" whether they would have detected the explosives that police allege Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab tried to detonate on a jet bound for Detroit on Christmas.

TSA spokeswoman Kristin Lee says the agency completed testing at the end of last year and is "highly confident" in the machines’ detection capability. She also says their use hasn’t slowed screening at airports and that the agency has taken steps to ensure privacy and safety.

The TSA is deploying two types of machines that can see underneath clothing. One uses a high-speed X-ray beam, and the other bounces electromagnetic waves off a passenger’s body.

Passengers can refuse screening by the machines and receive a pat-down search by a security officer, screening by a metal detector, or both, the TSA says.

 

For more information on an Elder Travel Companion go to CareToGoTravel.com and for Phoenix in home care caregiver see Care-To-Go.com

Backlash grows against full-body scanners in airports By Phoenix Travel Companion

Backlash grows against full-body scanners in airports

Elder Travel Companion Phoenix azAs the TSA  airports try to get a handle on quick and efficient scanning at security checkpoints, new machines may not be the answer.

Our Elder Travel Companions from Phoenix and Scottsdale report longer security delays and frazzled nerves at full body scan airports.  Our seniors in wheel chairs are not subject to this screening and will continue to be checked as usual.  The Travel Companion CareGiver can be a great asset in transiting airport security.

 

By Gary Stoller, USA TODAY

Opposition to new full-body imaging machines to screen passengers and the government’s deployment of them at most major airports is growing.

Many frequent fliers complain they’re time-consuming or invade their privacy. The world’s airlines say they shouldn’t be used for primary security screening. And questions are being raised about possible effects on passengers’ health.

"The system takes three to five times as long as walking through a metal detector," says Phil Bush of Atlanta, one of many fliers on USA TODAY’s Road Warriors panel who oppose the machines. "This looks to be yet another disaster waiting to happen."

BODY SCANNERS: Concerns about privacy and health set off debate

The machines — dubbed by some fliers as virtual strip searches — were installed at many airports in March after a Christmas Day airline bombing attempt. The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) has spent more than $80 million for about 500 machines, including 133 now at airports. It plans to install about 1,000 by the end of next year.

The machines are running into complaints and questions here and overseas:

•The International Air Transport Association, which represents 250 of the world’s airlines, including major U.S. carriers, says the TSA lacks "a strategy and a vision" of how the machines fit into a comprehensive checkpoint security plan. "The TSA is putting the cart before the horse," association spokesman Steve Lott says.

•Security officials in Dubai said this month they wouldn’t use the machines because they violate "personal privacy," and information about their "side effects" on health isn’t known.

•Last month, the European Commission said in a report that "a rigorous scientific assessment" of potential health risks is needed before machines are deployed there. It also said screening methods besides the new machines should be used on pregnant women, babies, children and people with disabilities.

The U.S. Government Accountability Office said in October that the TSA was deploying the machines without fully testing them and assessing whether they could detect "threat items" concealed on various parts of the body. And in March, the office said it "remains unclear" whether they would have detected the explosives that police allege Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab tried to detonate on a jet bound for Detroit on Christmas.

TSA spokeswoman Kristin Lee says the agency completed testing at the end of last year and is "highly confident" in the machines’ detection capability. She also says their use hasn’t slowed screening at airports and that the agency has taken steps to ensure privacy and safety.

The TSA is deploying two types of machines that can see underneath clothing. One uses a high-speed X-ray beam, and the other bounces electromagnetic waves off a passenger’s body.

Passengers can refuse screening by the machines and receive a pat-down search by a security officer, screening by a metal detector, or both, the TSA says.

 

For more information on an Elder Travel Companion go to CareToGoTravel.com and for Phoenix in home care caregiver see Care-To-Go.com

Phoenix CareGiver Explains How To Keep Track Of Medications While On Vacation

One of the most important things for the elderly to have organized while traveling is their medications.  As reported in previous articles, all medications needed for a trip should be kept in carry-on bags.  There should be plenty for the trip and bring the forms listed below in case a refill is necessary.  A Personal Travel Assistant can help organize medications for a trip. There are also several more reasons to take a Travel Companion along.

As we age doctors prescribe additional drugs. There are so many kinds, of side effects, limitations and cautions that it will become hard keep organized as well as be safe. Your caregiver professional will be able to lend a hand with forms to keep track. You ought to possess a master list, a list of drugs you take each day, in addition to a different sheet for prescriptions that could have severe side effects or particular directives. Included here are seven Prescription Recommendations to keep it straight.

The Medications List
This form ought to contain your critical information concerning your drugs plus times to be taken it’s color and size. Your information included should include your name, the doctors’ name, the doctors’ telephone and address, the pharmacy telephone and address. The date of birth plus social security number must be here because this is how the pharmacy computer systems detect the patient for refills.

The Medications Side Effects Sheet
This form is just what it says. The patients name, address and telephone ought to be there of course. There should also be a listing of medication names, prescribed amount, frequency, as well as classification. There should be plenty of space for side effects, special instructions and cautions. There may be one drug per page.

Caregivers as advocates
When you need help tracking and understanding your prescriptions, be sure to bring an advocate along with you to the doctors’ office and the pharmacy. Your CareGiver should be at every appointment along with you. As an advocate, your Caregiver professional will ensure all instructions, side effects, and cautions are understood and written down. The CareGiver can then help with the lists you will keep as will as organizing you pillbox for every week.

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Phoenix Area Travel Companions Report Airport Security Changes

The  Security check procedures at the airport change often and a Personal Travel Assistant can assist Senior travelers get through easily.

Phoenix Travel CompanionWhen elderly travelers pass through an airport it is  important for them to know all of  the ins and outs of baggage rules, check –in procedures, getting through the TSA security checkpoint and locating the correct departure gate.  This can be very confusing if traveling without assistance.  With the  hearing loss, eyesight loss, and some poor judgment, the airport  can be confusing.

 

A Travel Companion could assist an elderly traveler from the beginning of a trip, to the destination assuring a smooth and rewarding experience.  Traveling  is supposed to be fun and even exciting.  So, getting through the starting airport and arrival airport easily should be  an important part of the process.

 

One Travel Companion company starting trips anywhere nationally can be found at CareToGoTravel.com.  Here you will find  experienced travel experts and caregivers to make your trip a success.

To read a complete article on security changes, click here.

 

 

 

Phoenix Travel Companion Reports Airport Security Changes

The TSA Security checks at the airport change frequently and a Personal Travel Assistant can help elderly travelers get through smoothly.

Phoenix Travel CompanionWhen elderly travelers go through the airport it is very important for them to be aware of all the ins and outs of baggage limits, check –in procedures, getting through the security checkpoint and finding the correct gate for departure.  All of which can be very daunting if traveling alone.  With the loss of hearing, eyesight and some judgment, the airport experience can be confusing.

 

A Travel Companion can assist elderly travelers from start to destination assuring a smooth and rewarding experience.  Traveling after all is supposed to be fun and even exciting.  So, getting through the departure airport and destination airport easily is an important part of the process.

 

One Travel Companion company operating nationally can be found at CareToGoTravel.com.  Here you will find long time experienced travel experts and caregivers to make your trip a success.

To read article click here