rdfs:comment
| - Flight Surgeon (or simply Surgeon) was a title held by Starfleet officers at Starfleet Command's Fleet Operations Center, Sol Sector. In January of 2155, J.T. Tagamolila, J. Devlin, V. Fredricks, M. Kelly, and J. Billingsley worked as Flight Surgeons. The title and the officers' names were listed on directory placards. (ENT: "Demons", directories) Flight Surgeon, like many of the other agencies and titles, was a reference to NASA and ISS terminology.
- Flight Surgeon was a doctor stationed on the USS Enterprise who treated Petty Officers Bobby Wilkes and Peter Shrewe after both suffered meth overdoses despite insisting that they had never taken the drugs at all. When Wilkes went into cardiac arrest, the doctor and his team attempted to save him but were too late as Wilkes died almost immediately, resulting in the investigation being upgraded to a murder investigation and Wilkes's remains being sent to NCIS for an autopsy to determine the cause of death.
- Flight Surgeon ist ein Titel von Sternenflottenoffizieren im 22. Jahrhundert. 2155 arbeiten J. T. Tagamolila, J. Devlin, V. Fredricks, M. Kelly und J. Billingsley als Flight Surgeons. (ENT: ) Flight Surgeon ist eine Bezeichnung der NASA für den betreuenden Arzt im Bodenpersonal und bedeutet übersetzt "Flugarzt".
- A flight surgeon is a military medical officer assigned to duties in the clinical field variously known as aviation medicine, aerospace medicine, or flight medicine. Although the term "flight surgery" is considered improper, it may occasionally be encountered. The civilian equivalent of the flight surgeon is the Aviation Medical Examiner (AME). Some civilian AMEs have training similar to that of military flight surgeons, and some are either retired military flight surgeons or actively serving flight surgeons in a military Reserve Component.
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abstract
| - Flight Surgeon (or simply Surgeon) was a title held by Starfleet officers at Starfleet Command's Fleet Operations Center, Sol Sector. In January of 2155, J.T. Tagamolila, J. Devlin, V. Fredricks, M. Kelly, and J. Billingsley worked as Flight Surgeons. The title and the officers' names were listed on directory placards. (ENT: "Demons", directories) Flight Surgeon, like many of the other agencies and titles, was a reference to NASA and ISS terminology.
- Flight Surgeon was a doctor stationed on the USS Enterprise who treated Petty Officers Bobby Wilkes and Peter Shrewe after both suffered meth overdoses despite insisting that they had never taken the drugs at all. When Wilkes went into cardiac arrest, the doctor and his team attempted to save him but were too late as Wilkes died almost immediately, resulting in the investigation being upgraded to a murder investigation and Wilkes's remains being sent to NCIS for an autopsy to determine the cause of death.
- Flight Surgeon ist ein Titel von Sternenflottenoffizieren im 22. Jahrhundert. 2155 arbeiten J. T. Tagamolila, J. Devlin, V. Fredricks, M. Kelly und J. Billingsley als Flight Surgeons. (ENT: ) Flight Surgeon ist eine Bezeichnung der NASA für den betreuenden Arzt im Bodenpersonal und bedeutet übersetzt "Flugarzt".
- A flight surgeon is a military medical officer assigned to duties in the clinical field variously known as aviation medicine, aerospace medicine, or flight medicine. Although the term "flight surgery" is considered improper, it may occasionally be encountered. Flight surgeons are physicians, either Doctors of Medicine (M.D.) or Doctors of Osteopathic Medicine (D.O.), who are primarily responsible for the medical evaluation, certification and treatment of military aviation personnel — e.g., pilots, Naval Flight Officers, navigators/Combat Systems Officers, astronauts, air traffic controllers, UAV operators and other aircrew members, both officer and enlisted. They perform routine, periodic medical examinations ("flight physicals") of these personnel, as well as initially examine/treat these personnel when ill or following an aircraft mishap. In the U.S military, flight surgeons are trained to fill general public health and occupational and preventive medicine roles, and are only infrequently "surgeons" in an operating theater sense. Flight surgeons are typically on flight status (i.e., they log flight hours in military aircraft as a crewmember), but are not required to be rated or licensed pilots, naval flight officers, or navigators/CSOs. They may be called upon to provide medical consultation as members of an investigation board into a military or NASA aviation or spaceflight mishap. Occasionally, they may serve to provide in-flight care to patients being evacuated via aeromedical evacuation, either fixed wing or rotary wing. The civilian equivalent of the flight surgeon is the Aviation Medical Examiner (AME). Some civilian AMEs have training similar to that of military flight surgeons, and some are either retired military flight surgeons or actively serving flight surgeons in a military Reserve Component.
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