Q. AS NASA’S CHIEF BIOETHICIST, WHAT DOES YOUR WORK INVOLVE?
A. I’m an adviser to the chief medical officer for the agency. I don’t make decisions. Instead, I analyze situations and policies and offer bioethical perspectives on specific problems.
NASA does hundreds of research studies. Every astronaut who goes into space is, essentially, a human research subject. NASA’s looking at the effects of weightlessness, of G-forces and radiation on the human body. One of the things I do is look over the research protocols and make sure they are in compliance with earth-bound regulations about informed consent and health and safety. I also try to help solve some of the thorny ethical problems of medical care for astronauts in space.
Q. WHAT WOULD BE AN EXAMPLE OF THAT?
A. According to OSHA regulations, workers — including astronauts — can only be exposed to a limited amount of radiation at their workplace over their lifetime. Humans in space are subjected to much more radiation than anyone on earth would be. So there was this one case where an astronaut was close to the limit of exposure because of space travel, and then he had medical radiation treatments for cancer.
Astronauts want to fly as much as possible. That’s what they do. This one didn’t want the medical radiation to count against the lifetime limit because it hadn’t happened in the workplace. NASA had to weigh the letter of the law against the intent of the law. I said, “Exposure is exposure.” The decision ultimately went that way.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/11/science/space/11conv.html?th&emc=th