Treating a medical emergency ... in space

Treating a medical emergency ... in space

From Health Report by ABC Australia

April 10, 2026 · 43 min

About this episode

The episode explores medical emergencies in space, lessons from Antarctica for space health, and discusses findings on mental health in adolescents along with medical advice on shoulder injuries and appendicitis.

When a medical emergency happens in space, how is it treated? And what does life in Antarctica have to teach us about staying healthy on a spaceflight? Findings from a large study of Australian teenagers find links between school connection, sleep and mental health trajectories through adolescence. If you have a shoulder injury and suspect it's the rotator cuff, should you have a scan? You might find more than you bargained for. And how badly should you want to hang on to your appendix in the case of appendicitis? Is it better to jettison it or keep it in there? References: Association between GLP-1 receptor agonist use and worsening mental illness in people with depression and anxiety in Sweden: a national cohort study Retraction: Cosmetic talc powder Oncologic Risk of Missed Appendiceal Tumors in Acute Appendicitis Future Proofing Study - Research Insights 2026 Incidental Rotator Cuff Abnormalities on Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Topics covered

  • medical emergency
  • space health
  • mental health
  • adolescence
  • shoulder injury
  • appendicitis

Keywords

  • space
  • medical emergency
  • Antarctica
  • mental health
  • adolescents
  • shoulder injury
  • appendicitis
  • GLP-1 receptor agonist

Mentioned in this episode

Organizations: ABC Australia

Products: GLP-1 receptor agonist

Books & works: Future Proofing Study - Research Insights 2026

Places: Antarctica

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