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Thread: Pbr 2

  1. #61
    TedK's Avatar
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    Just to make it a little easier to see the Medical part of PBOR2 in the NDAA, I have pasted it below.


    COMPREHENSIVE MEDICAL EXAMINATION.
    (1) IN GENERAL. Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Administrator shall develop a checklist for an individual to complete and provide to the physician performing the comprehensive medical examination required in subsection (a)(7).

    (2) REQUIREMENTS. The checklist shall contain

    (A) a section, for the individual to complete that contains
    (i) boxes 3 through 13 and boxes 16 through 19 of the Federal Aviation Administration Form 8500-8 (3-99);
    (ii) a signature line for the individual to affirm that
    (I) the answers provided by the individual on that checklist, including the individual?s answers regarding medical history, are true and complete;
    (II) the individual understands that he or she is prohibited under Federal Aviation Administration regulations from acting as pilot in command, or any other capacity as a required flight crew member, if he or she knows or has reason to know of any medical deficiency or medically disqualifying condition that would make the individual unable to operate the aircraft in a safe manner; and
    (III) the individual is aware of the regulations pertaining to the prohibition on operations during medical deficiency and has no medically disqualifying conditions in accordance with applicable law;

    (B) a section with instructions for the individual to provide the completed checklist to the physician performing the comprehensive medical examination required in subsection (a)(7); and

    (C) a section, for the physician to complete, that instructs the physician

    (i) to perform a clinical examination of -

    (I) head, face, neck, and scalp;

    (II) nose, sinuses, mouth, and throat;
    (III) ears, general (internal and external canals), and eardrums (perforation);
    (IV) eyes (general), ophthalmoscopic, pupils (equality and reaction), and ocular motility (associated parallel movement, nystagmus);
    (V) lungs and chest (not including breast examination);
    (VI) heart (precordial activity, rhythm, sounds, and murmurs);
    (VII) vascular system (pulse, amplitude, and character, and arms, legs, and others);
    (VIII) abdomen and viscera (including hernia);
    (IX) anus (not including digital examination);
    (X) skin;
    (XI) G-U system (not including pelvic examination);
    (XII) upper and lower extremities (strength and range of motion);
    (XIII) spine and other musculoskeletal;
    (XIV) identifying body marks, scars, and tattoos (size and location);
    (XV) lymphatics;
    (XVI) neurologic (tendon reflexes, equilibrium, senses, cranial nerves, and coordination, etc.);
    (XVII) psychiatric (appearance, behavior, mood, communication, and memory);
    (XVIII) general systemic;
    (XIX) hearing;
    (XX) vision (distant, near, and intermediate vision, field of vision, color vision, and ocular alignment);
    (XXI) blood pressure and pulse; and
    (XXII) anything else the physician, in his or her medical judgment, considers necessary;


    (ii) to exercise medical discretion to address, as medically appropriate, any medical conditions identified, and to exercise medical discretion in determining whether any medical tests are warranted as part of the comprehensive medical examination;

    (iii) to discuss all drugs the individual reports taking (prescription and non- prescription) and their potential to interfere with the safe operation of an aircraft or motor vehicle;

    (iv) to sign the checklist, stating: ‘‘I certify that I discussed all items on this checklist with the individual during my examination, discussed any medications the individual is taking that could interfere with their ability to safely operate an aircraft or motor vehicle, and performed an examination that included all of the items on this checklist. I certify that I am not aware of any medical condition that, as presently treated, could interfere with the individual’s ability to safely operate an aircraft.’’; and

    (v) to provide the date the comprehensive medical examination was completed, and the physician’s full name, address, telephone number, and State medical license number.
    Last edited by TedK; 06-21-2016 at 09:37 AM.

  2. #62
    Mike Switzer's Avatar
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    Looks to me like you still need a medical, it just doesn't have to be done by an AME. Doctors are just going to love this - I wonder how will they code everything on the checklist to comply with the Obamacare rules?

  3. #63

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    Forgive my ignorance, but is the 10 year exclusion still part of all of this?
    Thanks
    Rick

  4. #64
    Mike Switzer's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by wyoranch View Post
    Forgive my ignorance, but is the 10 year exclusion still part of all of this?
    Thanks
    Rick
    Yes

  5. #65

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    What were they thinking when this was added to the list..........



    (i) to perform a clinical examination of -


    (I) head, face, neck, and scalp;

    (II) nose, sinuses, mouth, and throat;
    (III) ears, general (internal and external canals), and eardrums (perforation);
    (IV) eyes (general), ophthalmoscopic, pupils (equality and reaction), and ocular motility (associated parallel movement, nystagmus);
    (V) lungs and chest (not including breast examination);
    (VI) heart (precordial activity, rhythm, sounds, and murmurs);
    (VII) vascular system (pulse, amplitude, and character, and arms, legs, and others);
    (VIII) abdomen and viscera (including hernia);
    (IX) anus
    (X) skin;
    (XI) G-U system (not including pelvic examination);
    (XII) upper and lower extremities (strength and range of motion);
    (XIII) spine and other musculoskeletal;
    (XIV) identifying body marks, scars, and tattoos (size and location);
    (XV) lymphatics;
    (XVI) neurologic (tendon reflexes, equilibrium, senses, cranial nerves, and coordination, etc.);
    (XVII) psychiatric (appearance, behavior, mood, communication, and memory);
    (XVIII) general systemic;
    (XIX) hearing;
    (XX) vision (distant, near, and intermediate vision, field of vision, color vision, and ocular alignment);
    (XXI) blood pressure and pulse; and
    (XXII) anything else the physician, in his or her medical judgment, considers necessary;

  6. #66
    DaleB's Avatar
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    It IS the FAA we're talking about, you know.

  7. #67

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    Checking for Klingons circling Uranus. I truly apologize but I could not resist........
    Rick

  8. #68
    Mike Switzer's Avatar
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    Yea. IX has never been an issue when I had a medical. My AME is my regular doc, and since my dad was diagnosed with prostate cancer, at my last regular checkup I got checked. But I don't know why that has to be on this checklist.

  9. #69
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    Quote Originally Posted by DaleB View Post
    It IS the FAA we're talking about, you know.
    Actually, no. This is the CongressCritters

  10. #70
    DaleB's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by dclaxon View Post
    Actually, no. This is the CongressCritters
    That's even worse. No K-Y for Item 9. They'll probably steal your wallet while you're bent over, too.

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