Hi all J Tonight’s thoughts
are being brought to you first because of my favorite time waster/avoidance of
things I should be doing, Facebook. So see, every now and then procrastination
and goofing off can pay off because I had no clue what I was going to do my
linked post on for this week. Thanks to my friend Jennifer for posting the
original article that sparked my interest and led me to do a bit of research to
see what it was about.
So what is all the excitement about?
It’s about using tattoos instead of medical alert jewelry. Being a nurse and
never having heard of doing this I was intrigued. Sure I know about medical alert bracelets and
other jewelry, but hadn’t ever thought about using a tattoo for that purpose.
It’s a pretty cool concept now that I looked into it. Instead of the typical
bracelet for example that while useful for alerting medical personnel to
potentially life threatening issues and information has major limitations; such
as they break, some people are allergic to the metal the jewelry is made of,
there are people who are not allowed to wear jewelry to their workplace because
of dangers of injury from the jewelry and there are those people who just forget
to or refuse to wear their medical alert bracelets for a variety of reasons. If
you’re okay with body art this could be a great option for you. Of course there
are some downsides, paramedics aren’t currently trained to look for them, there’s
no real regulation or consistency to location, appearance or information contained,
but these are potentially easily overcome obstacles.
I found this website that is full of
Diabetes Advocacy Tattoos, some of which are gorgeous and do show some
consistency in information and location. I have noticed many of the alert style
ones are on the forearm, predominantly the left, which works for me as that’s
where I’d wear a bracelet and where I’ve personally seen many alert bracelets.
You also need to realize that if you
have a medical condition, for example diabetes as many of the articles use that
you need to take some precautions when deciding a medical tattoo is right for
you. The guidelines lined out in Tattoos as Medical Warning include but are not
limited to: use a reputable tattoo artist, do not get a tattoo in an area of
poor circulation such as your feet and make sure your blood sugar is controlled
during the procedure. These recommendations are fully endorsed in that article
by Yimmy Householder who is the manager of NeedleMasters Tattoo Studio in
Toledo, Ohio and a tattooed diabetic himself.
Another emerging and somewhat
controversial use of medical tattoos is explained in this article I found that features
Dr. Ed Friedlander, a Kansas City pathologist who has “No CPR” tattooed on the
center of his chest. I personally applaud his commitment to his personal
feelings and have considered getting a similar tattoo when I reach that point
in my life. As a nurse I see so many conflicted families that aren’t 100% sure
what their family member wants (even with well documented living wills) so I’m
hoping this will help my family out, or at least remind them that they aren’t
following my wishes should they choose a different path. The article does
mention that currently medical tattoos don’t carry much legal weight, but you
never know what will change in time, right?
I hope this gave you all a few
things to think about as it did me, happy researching & commenting!
Wow, that's so interesting. I have a brother is has a really bad nut allergy. He could die in just minutes of eating even a trace. He carries an epi-pen everywhere and he's so scared about this issue all the time. I might tell him about the tattoo thing, it might give him more peace of mind.
ReplyDeleteI never thought of this before and I think this is a great idea! I hate wearing bracelets myself and would rather have a tattoo than have to wear one. Very cool.
I'm thinking this is how I'll go should the need to wear a medical alert bracelet ever arise. I'm awful at wearing any type of jewelry and react badly to most metals. Plus I love tattoos, so it's a double win for me.
DeleteI already love tattoos so this is extremely cool to me! It's very interesting too. And I agree with Alicia about not liking bracelets also. Great post! Thanks for the interesting info!
ReplyDeleteThank you! I'm a tattoo fan too, and a non-lover of bracelets, so it'd be a win-win for me if I ever need one too.
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