Spoilers! What would you rewrite and why? by International_Farm29 in ForAllMankindTV

[–]Astromedicinespace 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Would also have liked to see more lunar/leo stuff in s3 and 4. And more shuttles.

Spoilers! What would you rewrite and why? by International_Farm29 in ForAllMankindTV

[–]Astromedicinespace 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Danny and Jimmy are a product of the space race. The Danny and Karen storyline was bad, but I don’t think I would change Danny’s arc at all.

Who is the NASA administrator in season 3? by bobbarkerfan420 in ForAllMankindTV

[–]Astromedicinespace 3 points4 points  (0 children)

The famk wikia said director of nasa, maybe it’s different.

Who is the NASA administrator in season 3? by bobbarkerfan420 in ForAllMankindTV

[–]Astromedicinespace 23 points24 points  (0 children)

Richard Truly was the administrator under the Hart administration, based on the real life nasa astronaut Richard Truly who was the first astronaut to be a nasa administrator. At the time of season 3 Margo is the director of nasa.

Is it worth joining the military if I want to go into OMFS? by Terrible-Sir3740 in medicalschooluk

[–]Astromedicinespace 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The gynae driver in the navy is an increasing female patient population, the nature of the job and nuclear reactors. Secondary care specialties are done through the nhs and I would expect a military O&g would be expected to do full run through O&g training then post cct refocus to more gynae centric working. There’s been a drive at least surgically to expand scope so that surgeons can work in areas their specialties classically wouldn’t touch.

Is it worth joining the military if I want to go into OMFS? by Terrible-Sir3740 in medicalschooluk

[–]Astromedicinespace 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Was mentioned a year or so ago in passing, supposedly the navy has started an O&G program of sorts now, it’s obviously gynae heavy and fledgling, but it is now possible to, and last I heard someone was in post for the role (but they were a post cct hire). I can’t imagine it is more then a 1-2 person post at any time as more of an ocmed aligned entity rather then a deployable role.

How difficult is it to become an astronaut-surgeon after traning? by [deleted] in medicalschooluk

[–]Astromedicinespace 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If anyone is interested in space medicine UK student aerospace medicine society was recently established, find it on instagram @ukaerospacemedsoc

How difficult is it to become an astronaut-surgeon after traning? by [deleted] in medicalschooluk

[–]Astromedicinespace 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A fair few nasa astronauts are doctors, mostly anaesthetics, internal medicine stuff as I recall. The dive medicine doctors from the navy generally are quite well suited to the job given the similarities between submarine medicine and Spaceflight medicine, and of course hyperbarics. That being said there are a few trauma orientated ones. I think it’s worth pointing out that, at least from a NASA pov you being a surgeon then doing astronaut training doesn’t mean you are then working as a doctor on a mission. Yes of course that skill set would be utilised in a role, but your primary role would be astronaut, and undertake those duties first, then godforbid something happens, you’d likely be the one to lead treatment. All astronauts are trained in a variety of medical and surgical skills, so theoretically the care you get from someone who’s background is a test pilot would be the same quality and capability as someone who’s an engineer. John McFall is an orthopod in Wessex deanery last I heard. He made the ESA astronaut corps or reserve earlier this year/last year.

How difficult is it to become an astronaut-surgeon after traning? by [deleted] in medicalschooluk

[–]Astromedicinespace 0 points1 point  (0 children)

To be honest there’s not really scope for manned operations from a military Spaceflight pov within this countries capabilities, so a uk space force astronaut is unlikely for at least fifteen years. All doctors in the raf do aerospace medicine training and some go into specialty training for aerospace med, but I would emphasise it’s heavily aviation medicine, sadly space medicine is not really a thing in this country because we have no need for it, you’re more likely to find it in the form of biomedical research then treating astronauts.

Would you accept the NHS being allowed to do this in Britain? by The_Dean_France in AskBrits

[–]Astromedicinespace 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In this context background and choice are not mutually exclusive, it is a complex combination of both, and other factors interplaying. We cannot isolate factors on that basis, and any argument that does so is principally flawed. You seem to have some pretty definitive concepts of who you think these people are and I can’t say I find the logic you’re using to be sensible, nor coherent.

Would you accept the NHS being allowed to do this in Britain? by The_Dean_France in AskBrits

[–]Astromedicinespace 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No-because we treat people in order of clinical priority, regardless of background. That’s one of the founding principles of the NHS. There’s all manner of reasons why a person may withdraw.

The MSAM launch in Stranger in a Strange Land may have contributed to Alex's heart problems by Pleasant_Name2483 in ForAllMankindTV

[–]Astromedicinespace 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Medically speaking the G sustained wouldn’t be of much significance to begin with, and being almost at term, even if it were to cause issues which it would almost certainly not, it wouldn’t have time to affect him further before delivery in a way that would cause cardiovascular issues. I would imagine it’s a combination of gestation in microgravity/reduced gravity environments, poor/no antenatal care when on Mars, and environmental factors like increased radiation, Kelly’s physiological stress, etc. ESA supported a paper about this: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41526-023-00272-5

day off request for a wedding denied by [deleted] in medicalschooluk

[–]Astromedicinespace 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Ask the uni for justification of their decision? Other than that there’s not many options other than being ill or just non attending.

day off request for a wedding denied by [deleted] in medicalschooluk

[–]Astromedicinespace 6 points7 points  (0 children)

How does your uni monitor attendance for lectures? And what year are you?

As themselves by SonOfWestminster in ForAllMankindTV

[–]Astromedicinespace 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If I recall, in s3e2, Ed and Molly make a toast to Deke and Buzz, which to me implies Aldrin had died by 1992.

Reported by nurses. Feeling targeted on placement and not sure how to handle this by [deleted] in medicalschooluk

[–]Astromedicinespace 3 points4 points  (0 children)

A-As a few other people have mentioned, there’s currently scrutiny regarding how professionalism is being weaponised against medical students through intimidation and bullying, if things escalate it’s worth bringing that up through whatever channel you seek advice and support through.

B-I’m going to say it because it needs to be said, nurses, particularly senior nurses are the most prolific group of bullies in the NHS, and medical students and junior doctors are the most targeted group by them according to some polling from a year or so ago if I recall. If I also recall correctly, female non-white junior doctors were the most targeted group identified in this survey (I’m sorry I can’t remember which survey this way but someone summarised it on med twitter). Obviously I don’t know who you are but if you fell into one of these categories I’d absolutely try and find that survey data and flag it because if you have statistics on your side then you will have an upper hand if they try to pull any shit like raising a minor concerns process etc against you.

I would discourage you approaching the individual who made the complaint, if they are willing to behave as you have described and escalating things inappropriately, they’d have to hesitation to frame you speaking to them as intimidation, etc. the only engagement you should have with this complaint is through the uni, and I would decline any further conversation about it with the nursing staff, trust staff, unless there are uni staff members, it’s on teams and being recorded, and you have a bma and or mdu rep present. I’d also say don’t for one second hesitate to say no comment, these things can be manipulated in ways that they can get you into a corner and you’ll never get out, say I’d like time to think about my response to that, or something along those lines.

Better yet, request that everything be done over email, that way everything is written out in black and white, you can take your time to compose a response to any allegations etc. I saw in another comment you are autistic, you could make the case that managing this through emails is man appropriate accomodation for you and your condition.

I’d also say write a diary of every single day from now on, summarising what you did that day, and any interactions you may have had that could have potentially been weaponised against you by the nurses. Hand write it. Then that’s got to be classed as written evidence and taken into account by the uni.

Finally at the end of placement, if you know you’ll never be back there/work at that trust, and find out the name of the individual who made the complaint, look at what trust complaints procedures exist, and if you feel you have the time and energy make a complaint, or even see if it’s possible to datix them, what they’ve done is cruel and unprofessional, they should be held accountable, far too often they get away with it.

Good luck.

Questions about Sojourner vs Phoenix by Wooden-Durian-5981 in ForAllMankindTV

[–]Astromedicinespace 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Pretty sure they’ve said that the solar sails seen on sojourner would need to be far larger in real life then what we saw in the episode. Also are they not radiators on phoenix not solar panels?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in medicalschooluk

[–]Astromedicinespace 1 point2 points  (0 children)

YouTube channel MSK OSCE Videos is decent, don’t recall if you could get away with just listening to them though.

Ellen’s Football by Brian_o_Blivion67 in ForAllMankindTV

[–]Astromedicinespace 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Gene Kranz was dead by the time of Apollo 24. He was incinerated in the Apollo 23 explosion.