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64 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
What are the policy statements for regulars and reservists |
DGPL - 08/07 - Regular DGPL - 34/05 - Reserves |
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What are the 4 aims of DMHS |
Provide effective care Provide education Undertake research Act in a command liaison role |
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Define a training shortfall |
A training gap is identified where training provided has not met the needs of the individual or unit |
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What are the four types of clinical training |
Formalised Induction Continuous Additional |
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What is the purpose of vaccination |
Maintain operational effectiveness Enhance immunity to disease |
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What are the 8 core vaccinations |
Hepatitis A Hepatitis B Meningitis ACWY MMR Dip/tet/polio Yellow fever Tuberculosis Varicella |
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What diseases are in high risk areas |
Japanese encephalitis Tick borne encephalitis Typhoid Rabies Anthrax Cholera |
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What are the occupational health vaccines |
Hepatitis B Rubella Varicella |
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What is the FMED for vaccinations? |
FMED 965 |
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At what temp are vaccines stored |
2-8 degrees C |
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What does FTRS stand for |
Full time reserve service |
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What are serving members entitled to |
Full medical, dental and other Primary Healthcare NHS treatment for special referrals Mental health |
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What are the FTRS entitlements? |
Full commitment Limited commitment Home commitment |
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What are MOD civilians entitled to |
Recommended vaccinations and malarial prophylaxis |
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In what areas can service families receive care? |
NHS Germany Garrison medical centres |
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What are Defence Diplomacy Staff and their Dependencies entitled to? |
Advice and support where their needs cannot be locally met |
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Where can medics be deployed? |
Armoured med regiments Field hospitals UAPs UKSF |
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When was the Freedom of Information Act made and when did it come into force? |
Made in 2000 Came into force Jan 05 |
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How long do you have to respond to a request for information |
20 working days |
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What are the 8 principles of Data Protection |
Fairly and lawful Adequate and relevant Processed for limited purposes Not kept for longer than necessary Processed in accordance to individual Accurate Not transferred outside EU Secure |
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Define medical confidentiality |
Statutory and professional duty to safeguard personal information by preventing improper disclosure |
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What are the 7 Caldicott Principles |
Justify the purpose Everyone should be aware of responsibilities Use minimal patient identifiable information Don’t use patient identifiable information unless necessary Access to patient identifiable information should be on a strict need to know basis Duty to share information can be as important as the duty to protect patient confidentiality Understand and comply with the law |
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What does RIDDOR stand for |
Reporting of Injuries, Disease and Dangerous Occurrences Regulations |
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How long maximum should an Accident report be made |
10 consecutive days |
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What are the 4 types of accidents to report? |
Incidents Accidents Near misses Deaths |
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What are the 6 types of specimen investigations |
Bacterial Viral Mycobateriological Protozoa Serological Haematology |
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Who is responsible for accident reporting? |
Line manager Individual in charge of activity where accident occurred |
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What is the FMed required for a routine referral |
Fmed 7 |
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What is an In patient case sheet |
F Med 10 |
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What is a Drug record |
F Med 152 |
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What is the F med and Mod form for Defence spectacles |
F Med 79 & Mod form 1003 |
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Name 5 inappropriate admissions for an MRS |
Mental health patients Pregnant women Acute major trauma Acute head injury Undiagnosed abdominal pain |
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What are the generic guidelines for specimens |
Appropriate container for infection Adequate to material to allow for examination Aseptic technique Sterile containers with tight fitting lids Samples collected prior to treatment Safe practice and technique |
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What are the generic guidelines for specimen collection |
Place specimens in appropriate container Explain and discuss procedure with patient Wash hands/put on gloves Dispatch to laboratory |
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What are the 6 specimen types and locations? |
Eye Nose Peri-nasal Sputum Throat Vomit |
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What are the 7 specimen investigation types |
Bacterial Mycobacterial Viral Protozoa Mycosis Serological Haematology |
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What is the FMed for an examination request? |
F Med 12 |
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What does PULHHEEMS stand for |
Physical capacity Upper limbs Locomotion - lower limbs Hearing right Hearing left Eyes right Eyes left Mental capacity S - External stability |
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What AGAI form is for the PULHHEEMS assessment |
AGAI 78 |
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What are the three types of JMES grades |
MFD - Medically fit to deploy MLD - Medically limited to deploy MND - Medically not deployable |
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What are the PULHHEEMS recording FMeds |
FMed 1 FMed 23 |
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What is the termination of service Appendix and FMed filled out by the president of the med board |
Appendix 12 FMed 19 |
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What are the pre discharge FMed documentation required |
FMed 1 FMed 133 |
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What is the documentation for Medical Boards |
FMed 19 FMed 23 App 9 from AGAI 78 |
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What are the 8 domains of Common Assurance Framework |
Governance Occupational Health Public health Patient experience Accessible and responsive Clinical and cost effectiveness Care environment and amenities Safety |
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What is the Ethos of the Common Assurance Framework |
Ensuring patients receive the highest standard of care in a facilitative environment within an open and fair culture |
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What are the Chain of Command roles and responsibilities in the CAF |
Ensure subordinates are aware of Clinical governance Ensure education and training is conducted Ensure everyone complies with Clinical governance and policies Apply Clinical Governance |
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What are the 3 categories to be recorded on the ASER platform |
Harm events Non - harm events Unexpected clincial outcomes |
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What are the 4 waste management principles |
Waste producer is responsible for ensuring waste can be safely disposed of by others in the disposal system Must be segregated at the point of disposal Clinical waste must be incinerated Non-clinical waste disposed of by landfill at local refuse tips |
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Common types of waste disposal |
Domestic waste Non-clinical dangerous waste Clinical waste |
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What are the 3 frequency periods of equipment checks? |
Daily 6 monthly Periodic |
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What are the maintenance levels |
Level 1 (Servicing and Day to Day tests) Level 2 (Maintenance by Replacement/Minor Repair) Level 3 (Special Skills or Equipment) Level 4 (Full Reconditioning/Major Modifications) |
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Name 4 different types of manual handling |
Lifting/lowering Pushing/pulling Holding/carrying Throwing/dropping |
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What does TILE stand for |
Task Individual capabilities Load Environment |
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What are the 2 types of back injury associated with manual handling |
Traumatic Repetitive |
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What are the 3 laws relating to manual handling? |
Health and Safety at Work Act 1974 Management at Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999 Manual Handling Operations Regulations 1992 |
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What is the normal temperature range |
36-37.5 degrees C |
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What is the normal pulse rate? |
60-80 bpm |
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What is the normal O2 saturation? |
95-98% |
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Why do we take obs? |
See trends in a pattern Determine baseline Monitor change |
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What is the normal blood pressure? |
120/80 mmHg |
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What is an FMed 5 |
Attendance and treatment card |
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What is the normal PEFR rates for males and females |
Males - 500-650 l/min Females - 400-500 l/min |
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What does PEFR stand for |
Peak Expiratory Flow Rate |