Page 1 of 99
AMEDD BOLC FINAL NEWEST UPDATE
2026-2027 ALL 200 QUESTIONS AND
DETAILED SOLUTIONS
What is the Army Health System responsible for?
operational management of the health service support and force health protection missions for
training, predeployment, deployment, and postdeployment operations.
What is the health service support mission?
Services to promote, improve, conserve, or restore the behavioral and physical well-being of
personnel by providing direct patient care.
What medical functions fall under the health service support mission?
1. Treatment
2. Evacuation
3. Hospitalization
4. Logistics (to include blood management)
5. Command and control (in FHP & HSS)
Health Service support falls under the ____________ warfighting function
Sustainment
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What are the principles of the Army Health System?
1. Define Conformity
2. Define Proximity
3. Define Flexibility
4. Define Mobility
5. Define Continuity
6. Define Control
What is conformity?
The medical plan is conformed with the Operation Plan (OPLAN).
What is continuity?
Moving the patient through progressive, phased roles of care, each soldier receives the care
required to optimize patient outcome.
What is control?
Ensure that scarce resources are efficiently employed.
What is flexibility?
Able to shift resources to meet changing requirements.
What is mobility?
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Assets remain in supporting distance to maneuver units, vehicle hardening equal to that of the
supported unit.
What is proximity?
Medical assets are at the right place at the right time, employed as far forwards as possible
without impeding ongoing operations.
what is an operational environment?
the aggregate of the
conditions, circumstances,
and influences that affect the
employment of capabilities
and bear on the decisions of
the commander
The Army accomplishes its mission by supporting the joint force in four strategic roles:
1. Shape operational environments
2. Counter aggression on land during crisis
3. Prevail during large-scale ground combat
4. Consolidate gains
Army Medicine views threats from two perspectives:
, Page 4 of 99
the general threat and the health threat
What is a health threat?
composite of ongoing potential enemy actions; adverse environmental, occupational, and
geographic and meteorological conditions, endemic diseases, CBRN, etc
The health threat is analyzed during the ___________________ of an operation in order to
develop the Health Service Support/Force Health Protection (HSS/FHP) plan.
planning process
What are the 6 Warfighting Functions?
1. Movement and Maneuver
2. Intelligence
3. Fires
4. Sustainment *
5. Protection *
6. Command and Control
What are the 10 medical functions of AHS?
1. Medical logistics
2. Medical evacuation
3. Hospitalization
4. Medical treatment
AMEDD BOLC FINAL NEWEST UPDATE
2026-2027 ALL 200 QUESTIONS AND
DETAILED SOLUTIONS
What is the Army Health System responsible for?
operational management of the health service support and force health protection missions for
training, predeployment, deployment, and postdeployment operations.
What is the health service support mission?
Services to promote, improve, conserve, or restore the behavioral and physical well-being of
personnel by providing direct patient care.
What medical functions fall under the health service support mission?
1. Treatment
2. Evacuation
3. Hospitalization
4. Logistics (to include blood management)
5. Command and control (in FHP & HSS)
Health Service support falls under the ____________ warfighting function
Sustainment
, Page 2 of 99
What are the principles of the Army Health System?
1. Define Conformity
2. Define Proximity
3. Define Flexibility
4. Define Mobility
5. Define Continuity
6. Define Control
What is conformity?
The medical plan is conformed with the Operation Plan (OPLAN).
What is continuity?
Moving the patient through progressive, phased roles of care, each soldier receives the care
required to optimize patient outcome.
What is control?
Ensure that scarce resources are efficiently employed.
What is flexibility?
Able to shift resources to meet changing requirements.
What is mobility?
, Page 3 of 99
Assets remain in supporting distance to maneuver units, vehicle hardening equal to that of the
supported unit.
What is proximity?
Medical assets are at the right place at the right time, employed as far forwards as possible
without impeding ongoing operations.
what is an operational environment?
the aggregate of the
conditions, circumstances,
and influences that affect the
employment of capabilities
and bear on the decisions of
the commander
The Army accomplishes its mission by supporting the joint force in four strategic roles:
1. Shape operational environments
2. Counter aggression on land during crisis
3. Prevail during large-scale ground combat
4. Consolidate gains
Army Medicine views threats from two perspectives:
, Page 4 of 99
the general threat and the health threat
What is a health threat?
composite of ongoing potential enemy actions; adverse environmental, occupational, and
geographic and meteorological conditions, endemic diseases, CBRN, etc
The health threat is analyzed during the ___________________ of an operation in order to
develop the Health Service Support/Force Health Protection (HSS/FHP) plan.
planning process
What are the 6 Warfighting Functions?
1. Movement and Maneuver
2. Intelligence
3. Fires
4. Sustainment *
5. Protection *
6. Command and Control
What are the 10 medical functions of AHS?
1. Medical logistics
2. Medical evacuation
3. Hospitalization
4. Medical treatment