A forgotten moment in physiology: the Lovelace Woman in Space Program (1960-1962).

Abstract:

:In 1959, Brigadier General Donald Flickinger and Dr. W. Randolph Lovelace II suggested that it would be more practical from an engineering standpoint to send women rather than men into space due to their lower body weights and oxygen requirements. When the Air Force decided not to pursue this project, Dr. Lovelace assumed leadership of the Woman in Space Program and began medical and physiological testing of a series of accomplished women aviators at the Lovelace Medical Clinic in Albuquerque, NM, in 1960. The tests that these women underwent were identical to those used to test the original Mercury astronauts, with the addition of gynecological examinations. Thirteen of the nineteen women tested passed these strenuous physiological exams (for comparison, 18 of 32 men tested passed); a subset of these pilots was further tested on a series of psychological exams that were similar to or, in some instances, more demanding than those given to male Mercury candidates. Despite these promising results, further testing was halted, and the Woman in Space Program was disbanded in 1962. Although the Woman in Space Program received a great deal of publicity at the time, the story of these women was somewhat lost until they were reunited at the 1999 launch of the shuttle Columbia, commanded by Colonel Eileen Collins.

journal_name

Adv Physiol Educ

authors

Ryan KL,Loeppky JA,Kilgore DE Jr

doi

10.1152/advan.00034.2009

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

2009-09-01 00:00:00

pages

157-64

issue

3

eissn

1043-4046

issn

1522-1229

pii

33/3/157

journal_volume

33

pub_type

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