Operational behavioral health and performance resources for international space station crews and families.

Autor: Sipes WE; Wyle Laboratories, Johnson Space Center, 1290 Hercules Drive, Houston, TX 77058, USA. wsipes@wylehou.com, Vander Ark ST
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Aviation, space, and environmental medicine [Aviat Space Environ Med] 2005 Jun; Vol. 76 (6 Suppl), pp. B36-41.
Abstrakt: The Behavioral Health and Performance Section (BHP) at NASA Johnson Space Center provides direct and indirect psychological services to the International Space Station (ISS) astronauts and their families. Beginning with the NASA-Mir Program, services available to the crews and families have gradually expanded as experience is gained in long-duration flight. Enhancements to the overall BHP program have been shaped by crewmembers' personal preferences, family requests, specific events during the missions, programmatic requirements, and other lessons learned. The BHP program focuses its work on four areas: operational psychology, behavioral medicine, human-to-system interface, and sleep and circadian. Within these areas of focus are psychological and psychiatric screening for astronaut selection as well as many resources that are available to the crewmembers, families, and other groups such as crew surgeon and various levels of management within NASA. Services include: preflight, in flight, and postflight preparation; training and support; resources from a Family Support Office; in-flight monitoring; clinical care for astronauts and their families; and expertise in the workload and work/rest scheduling of crews on the ISS. Each of the four operational areas is summarized, as are future directions for the BHP program.
Databáze: MEDLINE