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If you need an escort after a procedure, turn to organizations for assistance

Dear Savvy Senior: Can you recommend some medical escort services that help seniors get home after a medical procedure? I need to have a colonoscopy, but my doctor’s clinic won’t schedule my appointment unless I supply them with a name and phone number of the person taking me home afterward. I live alone with no family nearby, and my friend doesn’t drive anymore. Any suggestions? — Need a Lift

Dear Need: Good question! Finding “door-through-door” medical escort services for outpatient screenings and procedures that involve anesthesia can be challenging for older patients without nearby family or friends to rely on.

Door-through-door escorts that most clinics require are a safety measure. With a colonoscopy, for example, patients often receive an anesthetic or a narcotic combined with anti- anxiety medication. These drugs affect the brain, and they can stay in the system for four to six hours. That is why the patient needs someone to escort them out of the building, take them back home and see them into it.

While there’s no one simple solution to this medical escort problem, there are a wide variety of local service providers, nonprofits and home-care companies that may be able to assist you. But what’s available to you will depend on where you live.

Finding help

A good first step in making medical escort arrangements is to talk to the health care providers who are doing the procedure. Find out whether their clinic offers transportation services or if they can refer you to a local medical escort service or individual who can help you. If not, see if you can remain in the clinic until the drugs wear off so you can safely drive yourself home, or hail an Uber, Lyft or taxi to take you.

If these options aren’t available, here are some sources you should check into:

>> Area Agency on Aging: Your local AAA is one of the best resources for locating transportation services, and it should be able to refer you to medical escorts available in your community. To find your AAA, call the Eldercare Locator at 800-677-1116 or visit eldercare.acl.gov.

>> Local nonprofit groups: The National Volunteer Caregiving Network (NVCNetwork.org) connects about 700 community organizations nationwide, most of which provide door-through-door transportation without charge.

>> Home-care companies: You may also be able to hire a medical escort through a home-care agency, or you can find someone on your own through websites such as Care.com or CareLinx.com. Note that Medicare doesn’t cover medical escorts, but in many states Medicaid does. If you choose this option, be sure you give plenty of notice before your appointment.


Jim Miller is a contributor to NBC-TV’s “Today” program and author of “The Savvy Senior.” Send your questions to Savvy Senior, P.O. Box 5443, Norman, OK 73070; or visit savvysenior.org.


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