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Anaphylaxis, Intra-Abdominal Infections, Skin Lacerations, and Behavioral Emergencies: A Literature Review of Austere Analogs for a near Earth Asteroid MissionAs space exploration is directed towards destinations beyond low-Earth orbit, the consequent new set of medical risks will drive requirements for new capabilities and more resources to ensure crew health. The Space Medicine Exploration Medical Conditions List (SMEMCL), developed by the Exploration Medical Capability element of the Human Research Program, addresses the risk of "unacceptable health and mission outcomes due to limitations of in-flight medical capabilities". It itemizes 85 evidence-based clinical requirements for eight different mission profiles and identifies conditions warranting further research and technology development. Each condition is given a clinical priority for each mission profile. Four conditions -- intra-abdominal infections, skin lacerations, anaphylaxis, and behavioral emergencies -- were selected as a starting point for analysis. A systematic literature review was performed to understand how these conditions are treated in austere, limited-resource, space-analog environments (i.e., high-altitude and mountain environments, submarines, military deployments, Antarctica, isolated wilderness environments, in-flight environments, and remote, resource-poor, rural environments). These environments serve as analogs to spaceflight because of their shared characteristics (limited medical resources, delay in communication, confined living quarters, difficulty with resupply, variable time to evacuation). Treatment of these four medical conditions in austere environments provides insight into medical equipment and training requirements for exploration-class missions.
Document ID
20120014366
Acquisition Source
Johnson Space Center
Document Type
Technical Memorandum (TM)
Authors
Chough, Natacha G.
(Stanford Hospital and Clinics Stanford, CA, United States)
Watkins, Sharmi
(Texas Univ. Medical Branch Houston, TX, United States)
Menon, Anil S.
(Texas Univ. Medical Branch Houston, TX, United States)
Date Acquired
August 26, 2013
Publication Date
August 1, 2012
Subject Category
Aerospace Medicine
Report/Patent Number
S-1124
JSC-CN-25545
NASA/TM-2012-217362
Report Number: S-1124
Report Number: JSC-CN-25545
Report Number: NASA/TM-2012-217362
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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