Brent Monseur.

Medical student combines interests in OB-GYN and aerospace medicine at NASA

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As fourth-year Virginia Commonwealth University medical student Brent Monseur looks ahead to residency and a career in OB-GYN, he knows the challenges he will face. “As increasing numbers of women enter the workforce and delay childbearing, physicians face new challenges to empower and support their patients to adequately plan their families,” Monseur said.

This fall, Monseur discovered parallels between these challenges and those that exist for another group of patients: astronauts.

“The tactics used in OB-GYN of primary prevention, the development of innovative technologies and the use of alternative health care delivery strategies form the bedrock of aerospace medicine,” Monseur said.

In October, he participated in NASA’s Aerospace Medicine Clerkship, a program that allows fourth-year medical students to complete a research project on space medicine. “I worked at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas, where my workstation was adjacent to the former sleeping and rehabilitation quarters of the Mercury 7, the original class of American astronauts.”

I envision investigating issues of spaceflight contraception and delayed childbearing due to career goals and cosmic radiation.

Although he admits it’s not the most typical path, Monseur hopes to combine his interests in OB-GYN and aerospace medicine in his career. “I envision investigating issues of spaceflight contraception and delayed childbearing due to career goals and cosmic radiation, issues where aerospace medicine and gynecology intersect.

“Fertility preservation and management of recurrent miscarriage would also be very useful in treating the astronaut corps should I pursue a second residency in aerospace medicine to become a flight surgeon. The beauty of the field of aerospace medicine is that the option is always there whether I want to pursue it directly after I finish my OB-GYN training or after years in practice.”

Combining the two fields is not totally unprecedented. While in Houston, Monseur met Richard Jennings, M.D., who is the only physician double board certified in OB-GYN and aerospace medicine. He also connected with Richard Williams, M.D., NASA’s chief health and medical officer, who earned his medical degree from VCU in 1979. Williams invited Monseur to tour NASA’s headquarters in Washington D.C.

Brent Monseur.
Brent Monseur.

Whether or not Monseur chooses to pursue aerospace medicine at some point, his time at NASA gave him a good idea of what it would be like to be a full-fledged flight surgeon. He also began to consider how the field of aerospace medicine might change in the coming years. As we move into what Monseur calls “the era of interplanetary space expedition,” there may be a need for consultants based in Houston who can deliver care remotely to astronauts traveling throughout the solar system.

For now, however, Monseur’s focus remains on our planet, and more specifically on finishing up his last year of medical school. Because of the School of Medicine’s flexible fourth-year schedule, he will be spending most of the year away from the MCV Campus. He also remains a national board member of Medical Students for Choice, an organization dedicated to advocating for training for tomorrow’s abortion providers and pro-choice physicians.

 

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