Ch 4 Key Terms Flashcards

1
Q

facility

A

any primary work area in or around an incident in which incidentrelated activities are planned, organized, directed, or conducted.

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2
Q

incident

A

anything out of ordinary day-to-day activities that necessitates a response (e.g., emergencies, disasters, outbreaks, vaccination programs, important meetings or conferences).

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3
Q

Incident Command System (ICS)

A

a formal, organized method for managing an incident, regardless of its cause, size, scope, or complexity.

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4
Q

Incident Commander (IC)

A

the person who provides overall leadership

at an incident.

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5
Q

multi-agency coordination system

MACS

A

a process for managing an incident in which multiple agencies that have different command structures and communication
capabilities are participating.

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6
Q

multiple casualty incident (MCI)

A

an incident involving two or more patients or an incident in which the number of patients exceeds the capability of local resources.

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7
Q

National Incident Management

System (NIMS)

A

a federally mandated “all hazards” method for responding to and managing an
incident; was created as a result of Homeland Security Presidential Directive-5.

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8
Q

resource

A

an individual, a single piece of equipment and its personnel complement, or a crew or team of individuals with an identified work supervisor, that can be used at an incident.

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9
Q

Section Chief

A

the head of a functional area within the Incident Command System.

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10
Q

span of control, p. 100

START

A

the total number of individuals or resources supervised by a single person; usually 3–7 individuals or resources.

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11
Q

strike team

A

a group of resources of the same size or type that is managed by a strike team leader (e.g., a group of Nordic Patrollers).

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12
Q

task force

A

a combination of different resources with common communications that is managed by a task force leader (e.g., a sheriff’s deputy, an NSP alpine patrol, and a search-andrescue team).

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13
Q

triage

A

a process of prioritizing patients for treatment and transportation based on their clinical signs and symptoms.

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