Traveling With a PICC Line, an Ostomy, or a Refrigerated Medication:
The Part Nobody Tells You
By Cayla McGrath
It usually isn’t the patient who asks the question. It’s the daughter-in-law booking the flights, or the son who’s driving the logistics. The question is some version of: “My mom has a PICC line and an ostomy. She wants to fly out to see her sister this summer. Is that even realistic?”
The honest answer is: usually, yes. A stable patient with their care team in the loop can fly, drive, and even cruise. Travel itself is rarely the medical contraindication. What sends families back to Google is the next question: how do you actually get three weeks of IV supplies, dressing kits, and a refrigerated medication from point A to point B?
The gap in what’s available
Every resource that covers medically complex travel covers exactly one lane. The United Ostomy Associations of America has excellent travel guidance — if the patient has an ostomy and nothing else. The CDC Yellow Book chapter on travelers with chronic illness is thorough, authoritative, and written for clinicians. TSA’s medical screening guidance covers the airport checkpoint and stops there. Supplier websites tell you about their product’s travel compatibility and nobody else’s.
Nobody maps the full journey for the person managing two or three systems at once. Nobody asks the question that the logistics-planner in the family is actually asking: how do all of these things get there together?
The answer that most guidance gives, when it gives one at all, is “pack extra.” That’s genuinely bad advice when “extra” means two pouches a day plus weekly sterile dressing changes plus a refrigerated medication that can’t go unrefrigerated for more than a few hours. “Pack extra” at that level is a duffel bag.
The move most families don’t know exists
Here’s what actually works: the supplies don’t have to travel with the patient at all.
Home infusion pharmacies will often ship medications and supplies directly to the destination — a hotel, a family member’s address, a vacation rental. Many can also arrange a partner pharmacy near the destination, which matters most if a refrigerated medication is temperature-compromised in transit. Ostomy suppliers commonly ship next-day in discreet packaging anywhere in the country. Many offer travel kits — a compact set of supplies sized for delays rather than for the full trip.
None of this is guaranteed. Policies vary by supplier and by insurance plan. But the asking costs a phone call. The question to ask is simple: “Do you ship directly to a destination address? Do you have a partner network near where we’re going? Do you offer a travel kit?”
Timing matters more than anything else here. Two to three weeks ahead, ideally surfaced at a pre-travel care visit, is when these conversations happen effectively. If the package is going to a hotel, confirm with the front desk that they’re expecting it.
The contingency layer
Getting the existing supplies there is one part of the problem. The other part is what happens when something new develops while the patient is away from their regular clinical environment.
Travel disrupts immune systems. Disruption causes stress. Stress changes the baseline risk for infections — UTIs, skin infections, respiratory illnesses — that are easy to address when a provider is two miles away and complicated when urgent care is three states over and the flight home isn’t until Thursday.
A physician-prescribed antibiotic supply for clearly defined, common conditions is a different thing than self-diagnosing a complex illness. It’s the difference between the UTI that can be confirmed with symptoms alone and the situation that requires an in-person exam. We’ve built the JaseCase specifically for the gap between when a problem starts and when a provider is actually reachable. For families managing complex medical travel, that gap can be longer and more consequential than it would be at home.
To explore what’s covered and how it works, visit jase.com/collections/symptoms-and-scenarios
Cayla McGrath is a content strategist with Jase Medical. This post is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a licensed healthcare provider before using any prescription medication.
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