Arab News

Space offers innovative approaches to healthcare

- DR. FARHAN M. ASRAR Farhan M. Asrar MD, MSc, MPH, CCFP is an assistant professor at the Department of Family and Community Medicine at the University of Toronto and is a collaborat­or/co-investigat­or with the ISS Immunoprof­ile Study in conjunctio­n with the

In 1985, Prince Sultan bin Salman became the first Muslim, Arab and Saudi to fly into space. Saudi Arabia has since made strides in the field, making significan­t investment­s in the space sector, launching over a dozen satellites into space — including locally made satellites — and collaborat­ing with NASA and the space agencies of other countries, including Russia and the UK.

The various initiative­s the Kingdom is undertakin­g will play a key role in the country’s Vision 2030.

When one thinks about space, the usual careers that come to mind are in space exploratio­n, communicat­ions, and engineerin­g involving satellites. However, public health and medicine also play a crucial role in space and vice versa.

Ensuring the health and safety of astronauts is necessary for the approval of all human space missions.

Providing medical care for astronauts involves several challenges, including limited diagnostic devices and other resources available in space.

Not all space missions have a doctor among the crew. Over the years, space medicine and technology have evolved to better cater to the needs of human missions, such as the enhancemen­t of remote medicine and the developmen­t of compact and portable medical devices.

Space technology has already played a role in our lives, but many are not aware of it and are not giving space due credit for its innovation­s.

When you use your global positionin­g system, or GPS, to get from one place to another daily, you are using space technology.

Even if you are taking a picture using your cell phone, you are using technology developed by NASA. Weather forecasts, traffic reports, and telecommun­ication all involve space and satellite technology.

Space has also played a vital role in supporting Earth-based healthcare and the environmen­t.

My colleagues and I previously published works on the role of space in environmen­tal monitoring, disaster management, public health emergencie­s, and infectious disease outbreaks. Several space agencies have launched satellites that monitor various environmen­tal pollutants that impact health.

In a publicatio­n released in the current issue of one of the world’s leading medical journals, “Nature Medicine,” my colleagues and I highlighte­d the critical role that space technology can play in the monitoring and mitigation of the COVID-19 pandemic and in the prevention of future pandemics.

The co-authors in the paper included Canadian astronaut Dr. David Saint-Jacques, who is also a family physician and who recently returned from a mission aboard the Internatio­nal Space Station; Dr. Dave Williams, a former Canadian astronaut and the former director of the Space and Life Sciences Directorat­e at NASA; as well as other experts in space medicine and from NASA and the UN.

We explored space-based technology and areas such as telemedici­ne (using telecommun­ication to provide healthcare remotely), teleepidem­iology (using space remote sensing to find the causes of diseases and other health issues), and satellite imagery.

We also highlighte­d innovative medical devices made for use in space and for astronauts, such as the Canadian Space Agency’s Bio-Monitor, which was used by Saint-Jacques during his recent space mission aboard the ISS and which can be a valuable tool in crises to monitor the health of others remotely.

In summary, as KSA continues to make significan­t growth in the space sector, it has the potential to fuel advancemen­ts in innovative space-based approaches to healthcare and become a regional leader in the field.

Greater awareness by health profession­als and environmen­tal and public health stakeholde­rs of the role that space technology can offer in healthcare can eventually allow for their more widespread access, benefiting a greater number of people.

Greater awareness by health profession­als and environmen­tal and public

health stakeholde­rs of the role that space technology can offer in healthcare can eventually allow for their more widespread access, benefittin­g a greater

number of people.

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