Field Medical Badge)
Army Physical Fitness and Tactical Foot
March Standards
Land Navigation (Day and Night)
Combat Casualty Care (TCCC Principles)
Trauma Assessment and Treatment
Medical Evacuation (MEDEVAC) Procedures
Airway Management and Hemorrhage
Control
IV/IO Access and Medication Administration
Field Sanitation and Preventive Medicine
Written Knowledge Examination (Medical
Doctrine & Procedures)
Warrior Tasks and Battle Drills
CBRN (Chemical, Biological, Radiological,
, Nuclear) Response
Communication and Radio Procedures
Patient Documentation and Reporting
Tactical Movement and Security Operations
Medical Equipment Setup and Field
Operations
Q: List the symptoms of acoustic A: The symptoms of acoustic trauma are:
trauma. hearing loss, tinnitus (ringing in the ear),
aural fullness, recruitment (ear pain with
loud noise), difficulty localizing sounds,
difficulty hearing in a noisy background, and
vertigo.
,Q: Acoustic trauma may result in A: Temporary (temporary threshold shift,
sensorineural hearing loss TTS) or permanent (permanent threshold
(SNHL) that is either ______ or shift, PTS).
______.
Q: The ear, specifically the ______, A: Tympanic membrane (TM).
is the most sensitive organ to
primary blast injury.
Q: True/False. The smaller the A: True.
size of the tympanic membrane
perforation, the greater the
likelihood of spontaneous
closure.
, Q: The majority of tympanic A: 8 weeks.
membrane perforations that
close spontaneously do so
within the first ______ after injury.
Q: Acute management of A: House-Brackmann grading.
intratemporal facial nerve injury
is to provide objective
documentation of facial
movement using the ______ scale.
Q: True/False. For significant A: False. For significant facial
facial pareses/paralyses, early pareses/paralyses, early administration of
administration of steroids steroids should be provided if not
should be provided regardless contraindicated.
of contraindications.