Author Topic: NASA + SpaceX research on crew health protocols during COVID  (Read 943 times)

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https://www.cnbc.com/2021/09/22/spacex-covid-19-research-elon-musk-author-first-astronaut-launch.html

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SpaceX research, with Elon Musk as an author, details Covid protections for first astronaut launch
PUBLISHED WED, SEP 22 20219:26 AM EDT
Michael Sheetz
@THESHEETZTWEETZ

KEY POINTS

SpaceX launched people to space for the first time in May 2020, a few months after the Covid pandemic began to spread across the United States.

Elon Musk’s company added quarantine precautions to protect NASA’s astronauts in the weeks before launch, according to research recently published in an academic journal.

“The commercial implementation of the NASA Health Stabilization Program by SpaceX with adjustments required during the COVID-19 pandemic was a success,” the report said.

The research:

https://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/asma/amhp/2021/00000092/00000007/art00011

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BACKGROUND: The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Flight Crew Health Stabilization Program (HSP) was historically implemented to minimize infectious disease transmission to astronauts in the immediate prelaunch period. The first ever commercial application and adaptation of the NASA HSP was implemented during the Crew Demo-2 mission in the time of the Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. This article details and discusses the first commercial implementation and adaptation of the HSP prior to the Crew Demo-2 launch.

METHODS: This is a retrospective descriptive analysis of the application of NASA disease prevention protocols for human spaceflight during the COVID-19 pandemic. In the context of the pandemic, extra precautions added to the HSP included daily symptom surveys completed by Primary Contacts of the crew, COVID-19 RT-PCR testing, and improved quarantine protocols.

RESULTS: Of the 91 SpaceX Primary Contacts who completed a total of 2720 daily symptom surveys prior to launch, 22 individuals (24.2) and 198 surveys (7.3) returned positive for potential symptoms of COVID-19. Two individuals were removed due to symptoms indistinguishable from COVID-19. Through this survey, systematic quarantine, and PCR testing, the Crew Demo-2 mission was successful with no known infectious diseases transmitted.

CONCLUSIONS: Overall, the commercial implementation of the NASA Health Stabilization Program by SpaceX with adjustments required during the COVID-19 pandemic was a success, with protocols allowing identification and removal of potentially infectious persons from the program. The principles of the HSP may provide an adequate infectious disease playbook for commercial spaceflight operations going forward.

Petersen E, Pattarini JM, Mulcahy RA, Beger SB, Mitchell MR, Hu YD, Middleton KN, Frazier W, Mormann B, Esparza H, Asadi A, Musk ER, Alter G, Nilles E, Menon AS. Adapting disease prevention protocols for human spaceflight during COVID-19. Aerosp Med Hum Perform. 2021; 92(7):597602.

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