Sandra M. Salzman

ORCID: 0000-0002-5756-2771
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About
Contact & Profiles
Research Areas
  • Risk and Safety Analysis
  • Occupational Health and Safety Research
  • Air Quality and Health Impacts
  • Birth, Development, and Health
  • Aerospace and Aviation Technology
  • Information and Cyber Security
  • Medical and Agricultural Research Studies
  • Climate Change and Health Impacts
  • Disaster Management and Resilience
  • Ergonomics and Musculoskeletal Disorders
  • Advanced Aircraft Design and Technologies
  • Sleep and Work-Related Fatigue
  • Human-Automation Interaction and Safety
  • Occupational Health and Performance
  • Infrastructure Resilience and Vulnerability Analysis
  • Air Traffic Management and Optimization

INTRODUCTION: Military aviation poses unique occupational risks, including exposures to intermittent hypoxia, high gravitational force, and toxic materials, in addition circadian disruption, cosmic radiation, ergonomic stressors also present commercial flight. We sought investigate whether a military officer’s career is associated with adverse maternal or fetal health outcomes. METHODS: conducted retrospective cohort study of female nonaviation officers the Health System from October 2002...

10.3357/amhp.6416.2024 article EN Aerospace Medicine and Human Performance 2024-08-22

INTRODUCTION: The aviation occupational environment may expose a developing fetus to intermittent hypoxia, high gravitational force, toxic materials, loud noise, frequency vibrations, and galactic cosmic radiation. These exposures in animal models are associated with adverse neonatal outcomes. We sought investigate whether maternal military career was health METHODS: performed retrospective cohort study of female officer’s children born the Military Health System from October 2002 December...

10.3357/amhp.6417.2024 article EN Aerospace Medicine and Human Performance 2024-11-01

ABSTRACT Introduction The U.S. Air Force’s Intercontinental Ballistic Missile (ICBM) force stands ready to launch weapons 365 days per year. Since its inception, missileers vigilantly operate consoles on a 3-day cycle: minimum 24-hour alert-shift/24-hour travel-admin/24-hour off, leading concerns that health, morale, and alertness are chronically impacted. In 2020, Missileer Occupational Health Assessment (OHA) revealed 76% of respondents struggle with being rested for duty 29% never feel...

10.1093/milmed/usad415 article EN public-domain Military Medicine 2023-11-06
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