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Women’s Health in Spaceflight: Life Beyond Low Earth Orbit

Authors :
S Puukila
J S Alwood
L K Christenson
A E Ronca
J Steller
Source :
Precision Medicine for Long and Safe Permanence of Humans in Space.
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2024.

Abstract

Historically, only 75 women have flown in space and while this inequity has been recently addressed with astronaut candidates about 50% female, research defining female biological responses to spaceflight remain limited. The NASA Artemis Campaign aims to land the first woman on the Moon for purposes of scientific discovery, technology advancement, and learning how to live and work on another world in preparation for human missions to Mars. The need to understand how sex and gender affect a wide range of physiological functions, impacting numerous health outcomes is critical. The purpose of this chapter is to summarize recent findings in women’s health in spaceflight, past studies examining female mammalian responses to spaceflight and highlight the need for additional studies to help reduce risk and enhance countermeasure development specific to female astronauts. The promise of artificial intelligence approaches for advancing the pace of research is discussed with the caveat that, at present, fundamental research on women’s health in space and sex-specificity of response to spaceflight stressors is not sufficiently robust to achieve this goal.

Subjects

Subjects :
Life Sciences (General)

Details

Language :
English
ISBN :
978-0-443-22260-3
978-0-443-22259-7
ISBNs :
9780443222603 and 9780443222597
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
Precision Medicine for Long and Safe Permanence of Humans in Space
Notes :
18-18FLAG_2-0028, , NNH14ZTT001N
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20240006986
Document Type :
Report