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54 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
sources of social services |
Chaps FRO Navy and Marine Corps Relief Society Marine Corps Family Service Centers Military One Source Exceptional Family Member Program Education Programs |
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elements of a Religious Ministry Team |
Chaps RP Voluntary Lay Leaders |
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Suicide warning signs |
- Withdrawal - Preparing to Die (giving away belongings, saying goodbye to family and friends) - Looking for Ways to Die - Change in Personality or Emotions, Behaviors, Sleep Patterns, or Eating Habits. - Low Self-Esteem - No Hope for future |
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Suicide prevention resources |
- National Suicide Prevention Hotline - Military OneSource - Suicide Hotline 1-800-SUICIDE - DCoE Outreach Call Center - HQMC Suicide Prevention - Leaders Guide for Managing Marines in Distress - Marine Corps Suicide Prevention Program |
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Heat cramp treatment |
-Give the victim small sips of cool water. -Remove the victim to a cool or shaded area. -Massage cramped muscles. -If indications of a more serious condition are present, transport the victim to medical attention. |
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Treatment for Heat exhasution |
Remove excessive clothing. -Place the victim in a cool, shaded area. - Fan or sprinkle victim with water to keep cool. -small sips of water. -Treat victim also for shock -Seek medical attention should indications of a more serious problem exist. |
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Treatment for Heat Stroke |
Send for medical assistance. -Move the victim to a cool, shaded area. -Loosen victim’s clothing and equipment. -Apply water or ice to the victim’s entire body, fanning the victim as much as possible. -Do not attempt to force the victim to drink. -Ensure that the airway remains open and that the victim continues to breathe. |
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Treatment for frost bite |
-Move the casualty to a heated area such as a warming tent or vehicle. -Remove or loosen constrictive clothing to allow the blood to circulate freely to the affected area. -For deep frostbite, which has penetrated below the upper layers of skin and into the muscles, transport the victim immediately to a medical facility. Do not attempt to thaw the affected area. |
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Treat and Prevent trench foot |
Keep the feet dry. Change socks often and air-dry or blot the moisture off. Keep the feet warm. Change socks often and use foot powder to absorb excess moisture |
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Treatment for Hypothermia |
Evacuate the individual to a medical facility as soon as possible. If transportation is not immediately available, move the individual to a warming shelter or at least out of the elements. • Remove all wet clothing and replace with dry items. • As with frostbite, gradually warm the body. The body is not producing enough heat, so an external source must be provided. Place as much insulation between the individual and the ground as possible to avoid conductive heat loss. If there is no other shelter, use a sleeping bag. • Continuously monitor the victim's respiration and heartbeat; administer CPR, if required, to maintain circulation. • Warm liquids in small sips may be given if the victim is conscious. |
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Two Tick Diseases |
Lyme Rocky Mountain Fever |
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Symptoms of Chiggers |
Small welts on the skin. Intense itching. |
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Chiggers Prevention |
Use insect repellent on target areas, especially the lower legs. • Keep sleeves rolled down and boots bloused. The best care for chigger bites is to wash the area with hot soapy water to prevent infection. |
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Describe the Black Widow |
The black widow spider is small (one inch in length) and has a small black body with a yellow/orange "hourglass mark" on its underside |
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Symptoms of a Black Widow bite |
No apparent mark. • Neurotoxin poison resulting in muscle cramps (especially the abdomen). • Tightness in the chest or difficulty breathing. • Nausea. • Vomiting. • Sweating. |
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Describe the Brown Recluse spider |
The brown recluse spider is smaller than the black widow; it is only 1/4 to 1/2 inch long. The brown recluse spider is dull brown in color with a violin-shaped mark on the back of the body. |
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Symptoms of a brown recluse bite |
Red, swollen bite site. • Blister forming on the bite site. • Fever. • After a few days, a scab forms on the bite site and later leaves an ulcer or possibly gangrene. |
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Spider bite treatment |
Render basic life support for the victim if in respiratory distress. Much more commonly, the victim will require relief from pain. • If the site of the bite can be identified, putting a cold compress against it may slow the absorption of toxin. • Transport the victim to a medical facility as soon as possible. If possible, bring the spider to the facility with you. |
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Hemotoxic snake bite symptoms |
tissue swelling at the site of the bite and gradually spreading to surrounding areas. Other symptoms include: • Excruciating pain at the site of the bite. • Severe headache and thirst caused by internal bleeding. • Puncture marks. • Shock. • Respiratory distress. |
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explain how multiple radio nets can be employed to enable command and control. |
Multiple radio nets allow command and control by separating major functional areas to allow adequate flow of information. An example would be separate nets for fire support, command and control, medical channel etc |
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frequency spectrum for tactical communications. |
Infantry battalion radio communications equipment transmits over three frequency spectrums: HF/VHF/UHF High frequency (HF): 2 to 29.999 MHz Very high frequency Low band (VHF Low): 30 to 89.999 MHz Ultra high frequency LOS/SATCOM (UHF): 225 to 511.999 MHz |
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transmission range for a AN/PRC 117F |
0 to 10 KM |
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Transmission range for AN/PRC-152 |
200 to 400 m |
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Duties of a user of cryptographic controlled items |
A user must acknowledge that they have read and understand EKMS and understand the handling, accountability and disposition requirements of CCI. assumes full responsibility for the proper handling, storage, inventorying, accounting, and disposition |
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Role of COMSEC |
deny the enemy knowledge of our true intentions |
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role of command and control in maneuver warfare |
deal effectively with the twin problems of uncertainty and time.
any clime and place In broad spectrum of operations |
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Role of tactical communication |
enabling of information flow throughout all levels of command within the MAGTF |
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Six Tactical Tenets (CABAGE) |
Achieving a decision gaining the advantage exploiting success cooperating being faster adapting |
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Most important step of OODA Cycle |
Orient |
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Two types of decision making |
recognition-prime and analytical |
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doctrinal development cycle (ETOD) |
Education, Training, Operational Employment, and Doctrine. |
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deterministic view of war |
Argues that combat is predictable |
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Describe the art of tactics |
How one creatively forms and applies military force in a given situation. |
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Describe the science of tactics |
The technical application of combat power. |
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What are the 9 principles of war (MOOSE MUSS) |
Mass Objective Offensive Simplicity Economy of Force Maneuver unity of Command Surprise Security |
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Recognition-primed decision making |
based on pattern recognition and subconscious decision informed by experience. Most important in dynamic and complex situations where time is limited. |
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Analytical decision making |
based on rational calculations, best used for unfamiliar or complex situations. |
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Acronym for Grid to Magnetic conversion |
MA GM = GA only remember: EAST add, West sub. |
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What is the Tactical Planning Process (6) |
METT-TC EMLCOA CG/CV/Exp SOM FSP Tasks |
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Elements of an IFAK (6) |
Tourniquet H- Bandage Combat gauze (Quick Clot) Chest seal or occlusive dressing Compressed gauze A1 Minor First Aid Kit |
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Nature of war/ Battlefield Dynamics |
friction, uncertain, complexity, fluidity, disorder, violent and dangerous, human dimension |
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War defined |
Violent clash between human wills |
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Define Equal opportunity |
concept which requires that the objectives of fair and equal treatment and equality of opportunity for all be applied to all management functions and leadership actions |
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Levels of war |
Strategic, operational, tactical |
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spectrum of war |
General war to MOOTW |
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5 horizontal themes at TBS |
Man or woman of exemplary character Dedicated to leading Marines 24/7 Able to decide, communicate and act in the fog of war Warfighter who embraces the Corp's warrior ethos Mentally strong and physically tough |
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Attrition warfare |
War in which the goal is complete annihilation of the enemy's forces and assets |
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Maneuver warfare |
circumvent a problem and attack it from a position of advantage rather than meet it straight on. The goal is to attack the enemy “system” – to incapacitate the enemy systematically. The goal is the application of our strength against selectedenemy weakness in order to maximize advantage. |
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Surfaces and Gaps |
Surfaces is a hard spot, a center of gravity Gaps are soft spots, critical vulnerability |
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Four types of friction |
External Internal Mental Physical |
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Describe war as an act of policy |
War must always serve policy |
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Combat Power (4) |
Speed, Focus, Surprise, Boldness |
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Define Sexual Harrassment |
Knowing, reckless, or intentional conduct with a nexus to military service that involves: Unwelcome sexual advances Request for sexual favors Deliberate or repeated offensive comments or gestures of a sexual nature |
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Services of Military One Source |
Military OneSource offers a wide range of individualized consultations, coaching and non-medical counseling for many aspects of military life. Services include education assistance, adoption assistance, financial and tax consultation, spouse relocation assistance. |