Aviation Medical Examiner

Jump to navigation Jump to search

WikiDoc Resources for Aviation Medical Examiner

Articles

Most recent articles on Aviation Medical Examiner

Most cited articles on Aviation Medical Examiner

Review articles on Aviation Medical Examiner

Articles on Aviation Medical Examiner in N Eng J Med, Lancet, BMJ

Media

Powerpoint slides on Aviation Medical Examiner

Images of Aviation Medical Examiner

Photos of Aviation Medical Examiner

Podcasts & MP3s on Aviation Medical Examiner

Videos on Aviation Medical Examiner

Evidence Based Medicine

Cochrane Collaboration on Aviation Medical Examiner

Bandolier on Aviation Medical Examiner

TRIP on Aviation Medical Examiner

Clinical Trials

Ongoing Trials on Aviation Medical Examiner at Clinical Trials.gov

Trial results on Aviation Medical Examiner

Clinical Trials on Aviation Medical Examiner at Google

Guidelines / Policies / Govt

US National Guidelines Clearinghouse on Aviation Medical Examiner

NICE Guidance on Aviation Medical Examiner

NHS PRODIGY Guidance

FDA on Aviation Medical Examiner

CDC on Aviation Medical Examiner

Books

Books on Aviation Medical Examiner

News

Aviation Medical Examiner in the news

Be alerted to news on Aviation Medical Examiner

News trends on Aviation Medical Examiner

Commentary

Blogs on Aviation Medical Examiner

Definitions

Definitions of Aviation Medical Examiner

Patient Resources / Community

Patient resources on Aviation Medical Examiner

Discussion groups on Aviation Medical Examiner

Patient Handouts on Aviation Medical Examiner

Directions to Hospitals Treating Aviation Medical Examiner

Risk calculators and risk factors for Aviation Medical Examiner

Healthcare Provider Resources

Symptoms of Aviation Medical Examiner

Causes & Risk Factors for Aviation Medical Examiner

Diagnostic studies for Aviation Medical Examiner

Treatment of Aviation Medical Examiner

Continuing Medical Education (CME)

CME Programs on Aviation Medical Examiner

International

Aviation Medical Examiner en Espanol

Aviation Medical Examiner en Francais

Business

Aviation Medical Examiner in the Marketplace

Patents on Aviation Medical Examiner

Experimental / Informatics

List of terms related to Aviation Medical Examiner


Overview

An Aviation Medical Examiner (AME), in the United States and other countries, is a physician designated by the local aviation authority given the authority to perform physical examinations and issue aviation medical certificates.

The International Civil Aviation Organization has established basic medical rules for determining whether a pilot is fit to act in that capacity, and it is codified in Annex 1 to the Convention on International Civil Aviation. However, most countries' aviation authorities have developed their own specific details and clarifications to be used in addition to - frequently more stringently than - the high-level standards prescribed by ICAO.[1]

AMEs in the United States

AMEs are private physicians, not employees of the FAA, and are selected, trained, and authorized by local offices of the FAA. A pilot can go to any examiner from a list of designated doctors and undergo the examination at any time. New AMEs are designated based upon the local demand for aeromedical certification services.

All AMEs may issue second-class or third-class certificates. Some AMEs are designated "Senior Aviation Medical Examiner", and may issue first-class certificates, which are required for pilots flying in air carrier operations. An AME may also issue combined medical/student pilot certificates.

As of 2006, the FAA had approximately 4,750 civilian AME's located in 9 regions, 410 international AMEs located in 91 countries, and 400 federal AMEs (military, U.S. Coast Guard, NASA, and other agencies).

AMEs in the JAA area

Member countries of the Joint Aviation Authorities in Europe issue their own medical certificates. Most now do so according to the established guidance provided by Joint Aviation Regulations-FCL 3 (Medical), in a similar arrangement to the US whereby the local aviation authority in each country appoints AMEs.

The JAA regulations prescribe two standards of medical certificate. Class 2 is required for private flying on a Private Pilot License and the more stringent class 1 is for professional pilots (Commercial Pilot License or Airline Transport Pilot License). An initial Class 1 medical examination must be performed by the Aeromedical Centre (AMC) of the country which will issue the license, but may be renewed by any suitably authorised AME.

Medical regulation in the JAA area is expected to gradually change in or after 2008 as the European Aviation Safety Agency takes over responsibility.[2]

Notes

  1. "Medical certification following illness". UK Civil Aviation Authority.
  2. "General Information on JAA Requirements". UK Civil Aviation Authority.

See also

External links


Template:WH Template:WS