Hey, so, I've seen several folks talking about how coronavirus advice givers insist you should everything on hand for two weeks -- including your medicine, and how impossible that is.

I'm a small-scale prepper who has been working on getting a month's worth of medicine on hand for a couple years now. If you want to be able to have extra meds on hand for emergencies, here's some tips:

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in reply to Jess Mahler

Coronavirus, prepping, access to medicine

If you have a good doctor, talk to them.

A doctor can up your dosage for a couple month so you can 'try' the higher dose, then 'decide it doesn't work'. You squirrel away the extra from the higher dosage.

Your doctor can also call in refills early. How well this works will depend on your insurance and pharmacy, but if your doc calls in refills 5 days before they run out 'to be sure you're covered' and you can get them right away...

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in reply to Jess Mahler

Coronavirus, prepping, access to medicine

...that's five extra days of medicine you can save.

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Do you have as-needed medication? Those are the easiest to save. Every time you don't need it, take it out of the bottle and put it with your emergency supplies.

Most of us aren't good about taking our medication every day. Some of us miss often, some only once a month or so. But it happens.

Get one of those weekly or monthly medicine things, or make one yourself. ...

in reply to Jess Mahler

Coronavirus, prepping, access to medicine

At the end of the week/month, every dose that you forgot to take goes in emergency supplies.

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Call your insurance.
Yeah, I'm serious. Many insurers have a policy that they will authorize an extra refill once every year to account for lost, stolen, etc shit. This is also supposed to cover in case of a natural disaster, you can call and say 'my house got flooded and I lost all my medicine!' and they'll get a refill authorized early.

in reply to Jess Mahler

Coronavirus, prepping, access to medicine

Okay, that's what I've got, but there may be other things you can do.

If you can, talk with your doctor, pharmacist or caseworker. Tell them you need help getting the recommended emergency supplies, they may have more ideas.

You probably won't be able to get a full supply of ALL your medicines, at least not quickly. But you can get started and get some of them.

in reply to Jess Mahler

Coronavirus, prepping, access to medicine

between several of these things, I'm pretty set on everything except (sigh) my thyroid and ADHD meds (i.e., if I'm stuck in the house for more than 2 weeks, I'm going to be a lump ;-) I should try that with thyroid.

I've moved to 90-day refills on everything too (less plastic).

I have 2 scripts of my anti-anxiety meds & the pharma keeps filling both of them as if I take them both daily, so, well. I stash them. FIFO, of course.

in reply to Jess Mahler

Coronavirus, prepping, access to medicine
depends on the meds. I’m on specialty meds that require annual prior authorization and also have to go through that process to change dosages. It’s a convoluted process and I recently went without meds for an entire month because my insurance carrier didn’t check their fax machine. Insurances reject anything outside their very narrow guidelines for most rare disease or rheumatic disorders. My meds would cost $10k out of pocket.
in reply to Lyn Who Was Always a Thorn Alder

I got lucky some years ago and found a relatively cheap (for the time) kit with a small portable solar panel, 7Ah battery and battery electronics; the panel is amorphous, which is nice for this application (less efficient overall, but also works in the shade), and it's just enough to power a small laptop through a significant outage.

Of course, it doesn't help with the rest of the house, including heating, cooking, etc., but... priorities, right? :D

Unknown parent

friendica (DFRN) - Collegamento all'originale

Elena ``of Valhalla''

To keep things cool there are a number of solutions, including cellars and pot-in-pot refrigerators. Keeping things *cold* is a whole different matter, however.

Heating stuff is easier, as long as some sun is available: solar ovens can bring water to tea brewing temperatures, and a black bag should be enough to get water warm enough for comfortable showers. Neither work really well when the sun is partially covered, however.

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

and solar ovens are pretty cool anyway, and quite cheap (for people with a living wage in developed countries, who have access to free cardboard boxes and can easily afford some glue and a roll of foil)… as long as you don't go overboard and design your own lasercut model O:-) (I may know something about this…)
Unknown parent

mastodon - Collegamento all'originale

ops witch

prepping adjacent
Omg I feel this. My partner and I have been thru a lot of shit and as a result we’re always prepared for shit - whatever it may be. We avoid the word ‘preppers’ for this reason but .. yeah you get it. Hello and it’s good to see you and be validated!
Unknown parent

glitchsoc - Collegamento all'originale

Nightman-core

I just posted the link to the entire thread so when folks see it, they'll be able to read it all in sequence. I'm trying to get more of my core page admins to move here instead of twitter because the majority of twitter is owned by the saudi royal family and that's shady af if you're worried about censorship and data sharing with US intelligence. So tbh I'm using your brilliance as a lure lol

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