Battling Motion sickness

Has anyone tried the EmeTerm Anti-nausea wristband or the MQ motion patches for dealing with motion sickness or have any other recommendations?

Comments

  • edited April 1

    We found wrist bands a lifesaver when our daughter was young. They do have to be placed in a very specific place on your wrist to work properly.
    Just checked them out, wow, technology has gotten to them, We found Sea Bands worked fine forty years ago, two pairs on Amazon , $19

  • If you're talking about needing them for you river cruise there is no wave action on river cruise ships. I'm very prone to motion sickness and the only time I've ever had an issue on them is going into/out of locks when my horizon line gets messed up.

  • It won’t prevent seasickness, but ginger in hard candy form helps to alleviate many types of discomfort—nausea, headache, stomach discomfort, general malaise. The trick is to begin taking it before symptoms develop. I always travel with it, as well as ginger tea bags.

    Your physician can also guide you and can prescribe medication if indicated.

  • My wife gets incredibly motion sick. There is a company called relief band and it has work wonders.

  • My son also likes the bracelets. We did end up packing (and using) a disposable nausea bag for the switchbacks on the Grand Canyon.

  • I found that CBD kept motion sickness away, 100%. Unfortunately, it is disallowed in just about every location you could name. Sad, because the stuff I take has zero side effects, doesn't make you sleepy, etc... I originally started taking it for lower back pain, which it cured (a bottle kept pain away for about a year, did another bottle, and 5 years later still no problems). Maybe someday it will be allowed on cruise ships. Within the USA, I can't recommend it, enough.

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