Evidence-Based Methods
Evidence-Based Methods refer to frameworks for integrating the best available research evidence, clinical expertise, and patient/stakeholder values into decision-making processes. In high-reliability organizations like nasa, these methods are critical for mitigating uncertainty and ensuring safety.
Key Principles
- Hierarchy of Evidence: Prioritizes systematic reviews and meta-analyses over anecdotal reports.
- Risk Quantification: Uses statistical modeling to predict adverse outcomes.
- Iterative Review: Continuous updating of protocols based on new data.
Applications in Spaceflight Health
Space missions present unique constraints requiring rigorous risk-management. Key focus areas include:
- In-Flight Medical Conditions:
- Assessment of performance decrements due to health events.
- Evaluation of adverse health outcome probabilities during long-duration missions.
- Reference: Review of NASA’s Evidence Reports on Human Health Risks: 2017 Letter Report (2018)
- Systematic Reviews:
- Utilization of National Academies reviews to validate health risk models.
- Integration of 2017/2018 letter reports into current safety protocols.
Related Concepts
- Systematic Review
- risk-assessment
- Human Reliability Analysis
- NASA Safety Standards