远程医疗
船员
试验台
航天器
太空探索
航空学
任务控制中心
国际空间站
系统工程
载人航天
医疗保健
工程类
计算机科学
航空航天工程
经济增长
经济
作者
Arnauld Nicogossian,Deborah F. Pober,Stéphanie Roy
出处
期刊:Telemedicine Journal and E-health
[Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.]
日期:2001-03-01
卷期号:7 (1): 1-15
被引量:77
标识
DOI:10.1089/153056201300093813
摘要
Remote monitoring of crew, spacecraft, and environmental health has always been an integral part of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's (NASA's) operations. Crew safety and mission success face a number of challenges in outerspace, including physiological adaptations to microgravity, radiation exposure, extreme temperatures and vacuum, and psychosocial reactions to space flight. The NASA effort to monitor and maintain crew health, system performance, and environmental integrity in space flight is a sophisticated and coordinated program of telemedicine combining cutting-edge engineering with medical expertise. As missions have increased in complexity, NASA telemedicine capabilities have grown apace, underlying its role in the field. At the same time, the terrestrial validation of telemedicine technologies to bring healthcare to remote locations provides feedback, improvement, and enhancement of the space program. As NASA progresses in its space exploration program, astronauts will join missions lasting months, even years, that take them millions of miles from home. These long-duration missions necessitate further technological breakthroughs in tele-operations and autonomous technology. Earth-based monitoring will no longer be real-time, requiring telemedicine capabilities to advance with future explorers as they travel deeper into space. The International Space Station will serve as a testbed for the telemedicine technologies to enable future missions as well as improve the quality of healthcare delivery on Earth.
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