逐步独立于地球的医疗操作的发展使NASA的探索任务成为可能。

IF 1.1 4区 医学 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Wilderness & Environmental Medicine Pub Date : 2025-09-01 Epub Date: 2025-01-27 DOI:10.1177/10806032241310386
Arian Anderson, Emily Stratton, Ariana Nelson, Jay Lemery, Kurt Berens, David Hilmers, Kris Lehnhardt
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引用次数: 0

摘要

美国国家航空航天局(NASA)从低地球轨道任务向月球和火星的长期任务过渡,需要逐步发展与地球无关的医疗行动(EIMO),以支持机组人员并降低整体任务风险。以前的工作已经确定并奠定了EIMO的基础,但需要进一步发展这一概念,为今后的勘探任务做准备。方法——NASA的探索医疗能力单元从2023年到2024年组织了一系列5次技术交流会议,其中包括人类航天、卫生技术和严肃医学方面的内部(NASA)和外部主题专家,以创建一个框架,用于开发以逐步独立于地球的方式维持人类健康和性能所必需的技术和程序。成果——宇航组织技术交流会议为专家和利益攸关方提供了一个论坛,以便更好地了解当前近地轨道医疗保健方法与维持长期深空任务宇航员健康和表现所需的创新之间的差距。这些讨论被记录、分析并整理成报告,这些报告可以告知EIMO概念的成熟。结论:在规划长期探索任务时,来自具有载人航天、卫生技术和严峻医学经验的专家的多学科投入至关重要。概率风险评估工具、扩展现实设备和先进的临床人工智能能力等创新已被确定为高价值目标,它们可以增强飞行医疗自主权,同时保持适当的工作量平衡和机组人员安全。通过进一步发展EIMO范式,NASA旨在确定未来工作、研究和合作的领域,以降低未来人类深空航天任务的总体风险。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Development of Progressively Earth-Independent Medical Operations to Enable NASA Exploration Missions.

Introduction -The National Aeronautics and Space Administration's (NASA's) transition from operations in low-Earth orbit to long-duration missions to the Moon and Mars necessitates the development of progressively Earth-independent medical operations (EIMO) to support crews and reduce overall mission risk. Previous work has defined and laid the foundation for EIMO, but further development of the concept is required to prepare for future exploration missions. Methods -NASA's Exploration Medical Capability element organized a series of 5 technical interchange meetings from 2023 to 2024, which included internal (NASA) and external subject-matter experts in human spaceflight, health technology, and austere medicine to create a framework for developing the technologies and procedures necessary to maintain human health and performance in a progressively Earth-independent fashion. Results -The EIMO technical interchange meetings provided a forum for a field of experts and stakeholders to better understand gaps between current approaches to medical care in low-Earth orbit and the innovations needed to maintain the health and performance of astronauts on long-duration deep-space missions. These discussions were recorded, analyzed, and collated into reports that can inform the maturation of EIMO concepts. Conclusions -Multidisciplinary input from experts with experience in human spaceflight, health technology, and austere medicine is critical when planning for long-duration exploration missions. Innovations such as probabilistic risk assessment tools, extended reality devices, and advanced clinical artificial intelligence capabilities have been identified as high-value targets that can enhance inflight medical autonomy while maintaining appropriate workload balance and crew safety. By further developing the EIMO paradigm, NASA aims to identify areas of future work, research, and collaboration to reduce overall risk on future human spaceflight missions into deep space.

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来源期刊
Wilderness & Environmental Medicine
Wilderness & Environmental Medicine 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
7.10%
发文量
96
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Wilderness & Environmental Medicine, the official journal of the Wilderness Medical Society, is the leading journal for physicians practicing medicine in austere environments. This quarterly journal features articles on all aspects of wilderness medicine, including high altitude and climbing, cold- and heat-related phenomena, natural environmental disasters, immersion and near-drowning, diving, and barotrauma, hazardous plants/animals/insects/marine animals, animal attacks, search and rescue, ethical and legal issues, aeromedial transport, survival physiology, medicine in remote environments, travel medicine, operational medicine, and wilderness trauma management. It presents original research and clinical reports from scientists and practitioners around the globe. WEM invites submissions from authors who want to take advantage of our established publication''s unique scope, wide readership, and international recognition in the field of wilderness medicine. Its readership is a diverse group of medical and outdoor professionals who choose WEM as their primary wilderness medical resource.
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