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You’re Scheduled To Fly & You’re Sick. Now What?

a man lying in bed with a thermometer and pills

We’re in the depths of cold and flu season right now and it seems like everyone is sick with something. If it’s not one of the various Omicron strains of Covid, it’s the flu. If it’s not the flu, it’s RSV or a cold.

If you’re sick and have a flight to catch, it can be a difficult situation. On one hand, medical professionals suggest not flying when you’re sick. Besides spreading your germs to everyone else, being in a dry, pressurized tin can for hours on end will only make you feel worse. But medical professionals also don’t take the realities of modern day travel into account:

So yeah, it sounds good to say, “Don’t fly if you’re sick,” but it’s usually not a reality. Well, unless you feel as if you’re, like, almost dying.

Meanwhile, you have a flight in a couple of days and you just started feeling like crap. So what DO you do?

This is why you should always get travel insurance

Just sayin’ 😉

But seriously…

Get checked & get a prescription

If you just have a cold, you’re pretty much out of luck – you can take stuff to ease your symptoms, but you pretty much have to let the illness run its course. But if you have Covid or the flu, there are medications out there (Paxlovid for Covid, Tamiflu for the flu) that can help you feel better faster. Both Paxlovid and Tamiflu are available by prescription, which means you need to get tested (at a minute clinic, at a pharmacy that has a medical facility on site, etc.) to see which one you have, and then you can get the prescription.

Both Tamiflu and Paxlovid will only work if you’ve had symptoms for 48 hours or less. So get tested quickly. Also note that some people who take Paxlovid get “rebound” Covid, which means you test negative a few days after starting the medication, but then test positive again a few days after that. If that happens to you, if nothing else you have a few days of being OK.

Should you fly?

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends that you not fly, or seek professional medical advice before traveling if you’re experiencing a fever of 100°F or higher or/and any of the following symptoms:

Talk to the airline

Believe it or not, most (spoilers: but not all) of the airlines DO have policies about rescheduling or cancelling if you’re sick. The rules vary from airline to airline, what type of ticket your purchased, if you have Covid vs. another illness, the extent of your illness, etc. Here’s what they each say:

Of course, that’s assuming you’ve paid cash for your flight. If you’ve paid with miles, it’s a whole different ballgame.

You’re going to fly anyway

Maybe you don’t feel sick enough to stay home. Maybe the reason for travel is just too important. But you’ve decided to fly. Here’s what to do:

Best laid plans

Heads up that airlines reserve the right to not allow you to fly if you appear to be very sick. They can and will refuse a passenger if the airline staff believe that you:

Feel better soon!

Feature Photo (cropped): DaveDeploige / Wikimedia / CC BY-SA 4.0

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