Abstract

The purpose of this paper is to describe NASA’s approach to establishing and maintaining a set of Agency-level Space Flight Human System Standards managed by the Office of the Chief Health and Medical Officer (OCHMO) at NASA that enables space flight missions by minimizing health risks to astronauts, providing vehicle design parameters, and supporting the performance of both flight and ground crews. NASA standards capture and provide knowledge, guidelines, thresholds and limits for the successful design and operation of spacecrafts and missions. The NASA Space Flight Human-System Standard (NASA-STD-3001) consists of two separate volumes of technical requirements: NASA-STD-3001 Volume 1: Crew Health addresses the requirements needed to support astronaut health and provide medical care; NASA-STD-3001 Volume 2: Human Factors, Habitability, and Environmental Health addresses human-integrated vehicle system design and operational requirements that will maintain astronaut safety and promote human performance. These standards are managed by an OCHMO team who continuously works with national and international subject matter experts and with each space flight program to provide the best technical requirements and implementation documentation to support the development of new programs. Through partnerships across the space flight industry, these technical requirements are constantly evolving to enable successful implementation of NASA programs and the commercialization of human space flight.

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