Welcome to the final installment of my 2020 trip to Yellowstone National Park! ‘Tis now the morning of Day 6, and we find ourselves at Midway Geyser Basin. This basin has a comparatively small number of geothermal features, but they are good ones! And they … Continue reading Yellowstone 2020, part five
Welcome to Voyages with Parkinson’s! If you are looking for my photography store, you can find it here: C. B. Williams Photography. If you aren’t looking for my photography store, please consider giving it a go, anyway. I cover a wide variety of photographic subjects, from the Colorado Rockies to Miami Beach, from ammunition storage bunkers to marmots…if I ain’t got it, you don’t want it!
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Also accessible via the Menu button at upper right is my new “Links” section. Here you can find links to relevant tools and web sites, both within and outside of the realm of Voyages with Parkinson’s.
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Long ago, I realized it would be a good idea to take an inventory of my meds about a week before each trip I take, to ensure I’ll have enough to last me through the trip. For a long time, I did all the math in my head. But the number of prescriptions keeps growing, and so does the number of places where I keep them. So, before my last trip (Vermont), I decided to build a spreadsheet to help me with this task. It occurred to me that I’m surely not the first person to do this, but I’m also surely not the last. So, in hopes that some o’ y’all may get some use out of this, I am making my creation freely available to download. Here’s a quick preview of the beast, which I call MedSpred:
Start by typing the names of all your medications and/or dietary supplements into the “Drug” column under the red section. If you need to add more lines for more meds, you should be able to add lines normally. The formulas should be entered automatically, so your new row should have zeroes in columns C, H, and I. Now, in Column B under the Red “Demand” section, enter the number of pills you take per day, for each medication / supplement.
Next go to Row 5, directly under the green bar, and enter a short name or description for each place where you keep a stash of meds. For example, I keep the bulk of my daytime meds in the kitchen, the bulk of my bedtime meds in my bedroom, a day or so worth of meds in a fanny pack I keep just inside my front door, and a two-day supply in my Aware In Care kit (which lives in the trunk of my car). If your meds are strewn across more than four locations, you may add more columns (again, the formulas should be updated automatically), but you should seriously consider consolidating.
Now the math fun begins! In the yellow cell (C2), enter the total of number days you need to have covered – including the days between now and your trip (e.g., if you will be leaving 7 days from now, on a 7-day trip, you would enter 14). Lo and/or behold, column C now shows how many total pills you will need for each medicine and/or supplement! Go now, if you will, to each of your med stashes. Enter the number of pills of each medicine at each cache. Unless you only have unopened bottles, this will require actual counting.
Once you have entered all of your information as described above, look at the purple-headed “Result” column. A negative number means you don’t have enough of that drug /supplement to last the whole trip. Contact your pharmacy / doctor immediately to make sure you can get the amount you need before you have to leave. If you get a result that’s at or near zero, you might want to contact your pharmacy / doctor while you’re away, to make sure your meds are waiting for you as soon as you get back.
In case it helps, here’s an example, showing my completed MedSpred for my last trip:
If you’ve gotten this far and think you want to give MedSpred a try, click here to see the available files.
Hi, how are ya? Wanna see more of Yellowstone National Park? Yeah, I thought so. Step right this way… Last week’s installment of ThrowBack Thursday saw me spend an entire day on foot in one area of the National Park. We pick up with the … Continue reading Yellowstone 2020, part four
A week ago, I slightly increased my Pramipexole dosage, in the hope it would address the off periods I have been experiencing lately. While there has been some improvement, I’m still not where I want to be. The anxiety and depression have been reduced over the last week, but the physical exhaustion is still as bad as ever. Worse, a fresh dose of levodopa no longer reliably vanquishes the exhaustion. So my guess is that the new levodopa pump wouldn’t help me. It may be time to add yet another different drug to my daily routine. Or maybe I should stop carrying all this Kryptonite around with me.
Resuming from last week, I bring you now to Part 3 of my summer 2020 stay at Yellowstone National Park. In accordance with common sense and sound mathematics, Part 3 of this series tells the story of Day 4 of the trip. I spent the … Continue reading Yellowstone 2020, part three
Several weeks ago, I mentioned the possibility of my getting a Levodopa pump system “installed” on my person. I have since decided against the pump, despite the fact I never looked at the additional information I had requested. For me, it comes down to two things:
Travel. Getting through the security screenings at airports is enough of a struggle as it is. I don’t want to add the complexities of explaining the electronic device that I’m hiding under my clothing.
Infection. I know my hygiene habits. So, I know running a tube from my duodenum to the outside world absolutely will lead to perpetual infection.
But, as I said in the previous pump post, something has to change. And now I think I know what that is. The reason I feel like something must be changed is not because of the physical fatigue I’ve been experiencing, or any of the motor symptoms. It’s because of the anxiety and depression that come with most of my Off Periods. When this has been the case in the past, it has been successfully countered by slightly increasing my Pramipexole dosage. So, I’m increasing it from 11 pills a day to 12. After a week or so, I’ll take stock of my situation and go from there.
As for the pump, it’s still a possibility down the road. But it’s not happening until I’m so far gone that someone else is in charge of my hygiene.
During the summer of 2020, I made a life-long dream come true: I stayed an entire week at lodgings inside Yellowstone National Park. OK, not quite an entire week. I spent one night in Jackson, Wyoming so that I could more readily visit the nearby … Continue reading Yellowstone 2020, part two
For the last few weeks, I have been telling you that I’m busier than usual, and will soon have a Major Announcement to make. And now I believe the time has come to make not one, not two, but THREE announcements! So let’s get started, … Continue reading NEW AMAZING PRODUCT!
During the summer of 2020, I made a life-long dream come true: I stayed an entire week at lodgings inside Yellowstone National Park. Not surprisingly, I ended up with a LOT of photographs. Having been on a couple of quick weekend trips to Yellowstone over … Continue reading Yellowstone 2020, part one