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An Automated Medical Inventory System (AMIS) to Enable Earth-Independent Medical OperationsBACKGROUND: Inventory of medical consumables and durables (medications, treatment aids, diagnostic equipment, etc.) aboard the International Space Station is a manual process whereby crewmembers reach out to their flight surgeon to relay when items are used. Performing a full medical system inventory is time intensive. However, as exploration progresses to long duration missions with little to no resupply or evacuation capabilities, maintaining an accurate account of inventory and location for medical systems across the mission will become increasingly critical. A new system must be developed for future exploration missions to meet the need for a crew-facing, real time method of managing medical inventory.

OVERVIEW: NASA’s Exploration Medical Integrated Product Team (XMIPT) is funding the AMIS project to mature the technology readiness level and to conduct a flight demonstration of a medical inventory capability. AMIS will leverage lessons learned from a Medical Consumables Tracking project previously demonstrated aboard the ISS in 2016 and 2017. Key components of AMIS include a database, supporting hardware and software, and interfaces to power, communications, or other vehicle or medical systems. Some medical inventory capability may be provided by the vehicle inventory management system which relies upon RFID-based technology and can track larger items such as medical kits or medical hardware. AMIS will augment these capabilities to enable tracking of individual medical kit contents. Efforts are underway to characterize the optimal solution trade space by comparing system specifications (e.g. mass and volume, etc.) across maintenance and operational use cases (e.g. crew time saved, total inventory automated, etc).

DISCUSSION: The contents of a Mars Medical System have not been fully defined which poses challenges to defining an inventory system and requires assumptions regarding medical kit contents and medical system design. Other important considerations include minimizing crew time required, avoiding access restrictions to medical inventory in the event of an emergency, and ensuring that data is accessible to other medical system elements to enable crew autonomy in provision of medical care.
Document ID
20240004505
Acquisition Source
Glenn Research Center
Document Type
Presentation
Authors
Courtney Schkurko
(Glenn Research Center Cleveland, Ohio, United States)
Moriah Thompson
(Johnson Space Center Houston, Texas, United States)
Rahul Suresh
(Johnson Space Center Houston, Texas, United States)
Kimesha Calaway
(ZIN Technologies ( United States) Cleveland, Ohio, United States)
Justin Yang
(Aegis Aerospace Houston, TX)
Date Acquired
April 15, 2024
Subject Category
Aerospace Medicine
Meeting Information
Meeting: Aerospace Medical Association (AsMA) 94th Annual Scientific Meeting
Location: Chicago, IL
Country: US
Start Date: May 5, 2024
End Date: May 9, 2024
Sponsors: Aerospace Medical Association
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 251546.01.22
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Portions of document may include copyright protected material.
Technical Review
NASA Peer Committee
Keywords
Automated Medical Inventory System
AMIS
Inventory
RFID
Medical Consumables Tracking
AsMA
Aerospace Medicine
Exploration Medical Integrated Product Team
XMIPT
Exploration Medical
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