AI Article Synopsis

  • NASA's "Vision for Space Exploration" program, initiated in 2004, plans for long-duration missions to the Moon and Mars, necessitating advanced preflight medical screenings to reduce disease risks in space.
  • Countermeasures like artificial gravity and current techniques from the International Space Station aim to combat health issues during these missions, especially concerning the unknown effects of radiation exposure.
  • Missions, particularly to Mars, will require autonomous medical systems due to long isolation periods, with a focus on including medical personnel and basic surgical capabilities within the crew.

Article Abstract

Future long-duration spaceflights are now being planned to the Moon and Mars as a part of the "Vision for Space Exploration" program initiated by NASA in 2004. This report describes the design reference missions for the International Space Station, Lunar Base, and eventually a Mars Expedition. There is a need to develop more stringent preflight medical screening for crewmembers to minimize risk factors for diseases which cannot be effectively treated in flight. Since funding for space life sciences research and development has been eliminated to fund program development, these missions will be enabled by countermeasures much like those currently in use aboard the International Space Station. Artificial gravity using centrifugation in a rotating spacecraft has been suggested repeatedly as a "universal countermeasure" against deconditioning in microgravity and could be an option if other countermeasures are found to be ineffective. However, the greatest medical unknown in interplanetary flight may be the effects of radiation exposure. In addition, a Mars expedition would lead to a far greater level of isolation and psychological stress than any space mission attempted previously; because of this, psychiatric decompensation remains a risk. Historically, mortality and morbidity related to illness and injury have accounted for more failures and delays in new exploration than have defective transportation systems. The medical care system on a future Mars expedition will need to be autonomous and self-sufficient due to the extremely long separation from definitive medical care. This capability could be expanded by the presence of a physician in the crew and including simple, low-technology surgical capability.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3357/asem.2314.2008DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

mars expedition
12
international space
8
space station
8
medical care
8
space
5
human health
4
health performance
4
performance long-duration
4
long-duration spaceflight
4
spaceflight future
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!