1 / 58

Aviation Medical Exams

Aviation Medical Exams. John W. Hariadi, M.D. NFS, AME, HMO, SSMSO. What are all those initials?. NFS: Naval Flight Surgeon US Navy (Department of Defense) AME: Aviation Medical Examiner Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) HMO: Hyperbaric Medicine Officer

benjamin
Télécharger la présentation

Aviation Medical Exams

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Aviation Medical Exams John W. Hariadi, M.D. NFS, AME, HMO, SSMSO

  2. What are all those initials? • NFS: Naval Flight Surgeon • US Navy (Department of Defense) • AME: Aviation Medical Examiner • Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) • HMO: Hyperbaric Medicine Officer • American Academy of Hyperbaric and Dive Medicine (AAHDM) • SSMSO: Space Shuttle Medical Support Officer -National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)

  3. Introduction • Medicine: Abnormal physiology in a Normal environment • Aviation: Normal physiology in an Abnormal environment

  4. Topics of Discussion • Airmen examination and certification • Preflight Clearance

  5. The FAA’s Medical Standards and Certification Process • Title 14 of Code of Federal Regulation Part - 67 • This is the regulation that governs what is physically qualified and what is physically disqualified for civilian aviation. • The WEB Site for current standards: http://www.cami.jccbi.gov/AAM-300/part67.html or http://www.faa.gov/avr/AFS/FARS/far-67.txt

  6. What is an AME ? • A physician designated by the FAA to perform PE’s necessary to determine qualifications for the issuance of a 2nd/3rd Class Airman medical certificate.

  7. What is a Senior AME ? • An AME with the additional authority to perform PE’s necessary to determine qualifications for the issuance of 1st Class Airman medical certificate.

  8. Criteria for AME Designation • Professional qualified physician (MD or DO) • The physician’s region of practice must have an area of need • AME to Pilot Ratio of = 1:100 within 50 miles

  9. AME Credentials Requirements • Initial application - FAA Form 8520-2 • Diploma from medical school • Certificate of any Postgraduate professional training • State License to practice medicine • Notice of certification by an American specialty board • References from three physicians in the geographic area that you are applying in

  10. FAA Classifications • 1st Class - Certificate good for 6 months • Airline Transport Pilot (ATP) • 2nd Class - Certificate good for 12 months • Commercial Pilot, Flight Engineer • Flight Navigator, Air Traffic Controller • 3rd Class - Certificate good for 24 (36 months)* • Private Pilot, Recreational Pilot, Student Pilot * 3 years if applicant’s age less than 40 years at time of PE

  11. Airman’s Applicant Information • All information is mandatory (except SSN) • SSN not required by law • Used as a tracking number • Provides the informed written consent for FAA to check the National Drivers Registry for DUI’s

  12. Airman’s Instruction Page • Self-explanatory • Excellent guide for the Airman.

  13. Front of FAA Form 8500-8 • “Medical Certificate” • Must have had a prior FAA certificate • Needs to *write, read, speak & understand English • Any age is “OK” • “The White Ticket” *Change 1 Oct 1999

  14. Front of FAA Form 8500-8 • “Medical and Student Pilot Certificate” • No previous license • Age Limitations • 16yo student pilot • 17yo private pilot • 18yo for com pilot • 23yo for ATP • “The Yellow Ticket”

  15. Report of Personal & Medical History • Current FAA PE form is the “FF” series • Now in Triplicate. * • The 3rd page is for the applicant to take home for subsequent use. *Change 1 Oct 1999

  16. Report of Personal & Medical History • Must be done at the AME’s office • Fill in everything ! • Only the Airman can write on the front

  17. The Applicants Checklist • Item 1 & 2 - Certificate being applied for • Check where appropriate • Any Age - for Airman Medical Certificate (white ticket) • 16 y.o. - Airman Medical and Student Pilot Certificate (yellow ticket) • 17 y.o. - Private Pilot Certificate • 18 y.o. - Commercial Pilot Certificate • 23 y.o. - Airline Transport Pilot

  18. The Applicants Check List • Item 3 - Print Last, First then Middle Name • Item 4 - SSN (Optional) • Item 5 - Needs full address with Zip & Phone • Item 6 - DOB (Month/Day/Year format) • * Citizenship now added *Change 1 Oct 1999

  19. The Applicants Check List • Item 7- Hair Color (No abbreviations) • Brown, Black, Blonde, Gray, Red, Bald • Item 8 - Eye Color (No abbreviations) • Brown, Black, Blue, Hazel, Gray, Green • Item 9 - Sex • Item 10 - Type of Airman Certificate • Check all that apply

  20. The Applicants Check List • Item 11 - Occupation • Indicate major employment, student, retired,etc. • Item 12 - Employer • Specify your employer • Item 13 - FAA Adverse Certification ? • If “YES” you can’t issue a certificate without a written FAA clearance, If no proof, defer case

  21. The Applicants Check List • Item 14/15 Flight time • Required, if no flight time enter Zero • Item 16 - Last FAA Physical • if none, so State: give month and year

  22. The Applicants Check List • Item 17b. Contacts • Use of bifocal or unifocal lens for near is prohibited • If “Yes” AME must record in block #60 of their informing the applicant of this prohibition. • Item 17a. - Medications • If YES state type and purpose (even OTC’s) • Much faster certification if marked “previously reported”

  23. The Applicants Check List • Item 18 Medical History • Most errors made here ,Must be checked “Yes” or “No” • “Ever in their life” had a condition - Check “Yes” and explain • 18 n* - Substance abuse in past 2 years (previously 5 years). • The AME needs to comment on each “Yes” answer • This is done on Item 60 block • If you need more paper use plain sheets; airman signed

  24. The Applicants Check List • Item 18V - Record of Traffic Convictions • Airman needs to report ALL Moving violations that are convictions • Item 18W - Record of Other Convictions • Airman needs to report ALL misdemeanors and felonies • Needs to include nature of offense, date and locality

  25. The Applicants Check List • Item 19 - Visit to the Docs • List ALL Treatments within last 3 years • The AME needs to comment on EACH visit on back page, block # 60 • Item 20 - Applicant’s Signature • Signed and dated in INK (check correct date) • Third page “applicant’s copy” to applicant

  26. Report of Medical Examination

  27. FAA Medical Standards (October 1999)

  28. The FAA Medical Exam Form • Item 21 - Height to the nearest whole inch • Item 22 - Weight to the nearest whole pound • Item 23 - Waiver • If the Airman has a “Statement of Demonstrated Ability” • Each waiver will indicate the level of class allowed • Item 24 - Waiver Serial Number • Usually Not Applicable

  29. The FAA Medical Exam Form • Items 25..48 - General examination • If not examined type “NE” and explain why “Remember… YOU ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR THE ACCURACY”

  30. The FAA Medical Exam Form • Items 49..60 - General Screening Laboratory • These items may be completed by a PA, RN, or lab assistant “Remember… YOU ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR THE ACCURACY”

  31. FAA Medical Standards • Items 49 - easiest to get the audiogram • Items 50,51a, 51b - Vision • Use a Snellen 20-foot or AFVT • Insure contacts are removed 24 hours prior to exam • 51b* Needed for1st and 2nd Class applicants over the age of 50 • Use EXACT visual defect wording on page 57 Guide for AMEs. • Item 52 - ColorVision • Record as either “Pass or Fail”

  32. FAA Medical Standards • Item 53 - Field of Vision • Report as Normal / Abnormal • Item 54 - Phorias’ • Not required for Class III • Item 55 - Blood Pressure (Sitting)-max 155/95 mmHg • Item 56 - Pulse • Make sure it’s a resting pulse

  33. FAA Medical Standards • Item 57 - UA • Done with dipstick • Item 58 - EKG • 1st Class Airman at 35yo then annually after 40 years of age. • Be sure to mail in with the examination • Item 59 - Any Misc. tests completed

  34. FAA Medical Standards • Item 60 - Comments • Comment on ALL “YES” answers on front and on abnormal findings marked on the back. • May use additional paper that you SIGN & DATE. This is the most important documentation block for the History and Physical Exam • Item 61 - Applicant’s name • Needs to by typed

  35. FAA Medical Standards • Item 62 - Medical Certificate Issuance • Item 63 - DQ Defects noted • Item 64 - Medical examiners declaration • Be sure to type date of exam in Month/Date/Year format • Type the AME’s Name and Address with AME Serial #

  36. 15 Disqualifying Conditions • Diabetes mellitus requiring insulin or other hypoglycemic medications • Angina pectoris • Coronary artery disease that requires treatment or has been symptomatic • Myocardial infarction • Cardiac valve replacement • Psychosis • Bipolar disorder

  37. 15 Disqualifying Conditions • Personality disorder that is severe enough to have repeatedly manifested itself by overt acts • Substance dependence • Substance abuse • Disturbance on consciousness without satisfactory medical explanation of the cause • Transient loss of control of nervous system functions without satisfactory medical explanation of the cause

  38. Disqualifying Conditions • Medications • Any condition that can cause SUDDEN INCAPACITATION • Think: “Do I want this person with this condition flying my airplane?” • FAA Waiver process

  39. FAA Points of Contact Melchor J. Antunano, M.D. FAA MMAC/CAMI/AAM-400 PO Box 25082 Oklahoma City,OK 73125-9944 TEL: (405) 954-4832 FAX: (405) 954-8016

  40. Preflight Clearance • Clinicians frequently asked to make recommendations regarding travel safety • Review risks posed by Commercial Air travel

  41. General Screening & Health Counseling • Air Carrier Access Act of 1986 • Requires DOT to ensure persons with disabilities are able to fly w/o being discriminated • In general, individuals with unstable medical conditions should NOT fly on a commercial aircraft • Airlines may require travelers to have a medical certificate from their clinician • Stating fit for travel, not contagious

  42. General Screening and Health Counseling • Screening questions should include: • Length of journey • History of tolerating prior air travel • Conditions of destination • Altitude, public health risks, access to medical care • Assess any worsening of the patients chronic medical conditions. Of concern: • Cardiovascular disease • Thromboembolic disease • Asthma, COPD • Epilepsy, CVA, recent surgery/trauma, diabetes, infectious disease & mental illness

  43. General Screening and Health Counseling • All patients preparing for air travel should be counseled on adjusting timing of meds (especially if crossing time zones) • 3 strategies: • Maintain normal schedule using time of home country (best for short trips, keep watch on home time) • Gradually adjust schedule by an hour or two daily until med taken according to local time • Abruptly change schedule so medication is taken according to local time (may lead to extended delay between doses; not to be used with insulin)

  44. General Screening and Health Counseling • Items for carry-on luggage • List of all medications • Meds that may be needed during flight (eg. insulin, bronchodilator, nitroglycerine) • Medical alert bracelet • Copy of recent EKG (Cardiac patients) • Vaccinations /Travel Advisory • CDC Website: http://wwwn.cdc.gov/travel/default.asp

  45. ASMA Fitness Screen • Recommended by the Aerospace Medical Association (ASMA) and Airline Industry • Fitness to fly : walk 50 yards at normal pace or climb 1 flight of stairs without symptoms • No objective validation for this as a screening test

  46. Specific Conditions • Partial pressure of oxygen decreases with altitude • Average commercial cruising altitude: 35,000ft • Typical pressurized cabin: 8000 ft • Typical PaO2 • 95mmHg (sea level) • 50-60mmHg (8000 ft) • Specific attention to cardiac, pulmonary and neurovascular conditions

  47. Cardiovascular • Patients with uncomplicated MI or PTCA should not fly until 2-3 weeks after and tolerating daily activities • Contraindications to travel • Unstable angina • Severe CHF • NY III or IV need to be assessed to determine Oxygen requirement • Symptomatic valvular heart disease

  48. Pacemakers and ICDs • Generally stable patients are low risk for inflight emergencies • Carry pacemaker card with copy of EKG • No evidence that airline electronics or airport security devices interfere w/ implanted pacemakers or ICD • Theoretical risk that ICD might detect alternating magnetic field created by the handheld wand

  49. Neurologic • Stroke patients should not fly within 2 weeks of their event • Migraines might be exacerbated by air travel • Epilepsy is generally not a contraindication unless uncontrolled

  50. Pulmonary • Hypoxia is major problem • ASMA Screening Test • Resting preflight PaO2 <72mmHg @ sea level predicts need for supplemental O2 in flight • Contraindications: • Pneumothorax • Severe asthma/COPD

More Related