Good morning. I first want to welcome all of our
witnesses to today’s hearing. We appreciate your service to the
nation and your assistance to this subcommittee as we carry out our
oversight responsibilities.
In particular, I would like to thank Col. Bachmann
and his review committee for their efforts to provide NASA and the
Congress with an independent assessment of NASA’s astronaut health
care system.
I’d also like to thank Administrator Griffin for
his willingness to ask for such a review – I think it was a good
decision that reflects well on the agency.
It is clear to me that NASA’s astronauts represent
the nation’s best and brightest. We all respect their skill and
bravery. In carrying out their challenging missions, they often make
it look so easy that we can sometimes forget that they are human
beings who face the same medical and behavioral issues that the rest
of us have to deal with, along with the added rigors of high-stress
jobs, long hours of training, extended absences from families and
friends, and high-risk space flights.
It thus is critically important that NASA ensure
that the astronauts be provided the best possible medical and
behavioral care throughout their careers.
In addition, NASA astronauts, flight surgeons, and
support personnel need to be confident that the lines of
communication within the agency are open and responsive so that
concerns can be quickly identified and addressed in a manner that
maintains the level of trust so vital to safety and optimal
performance.
I don’t think anyone inside NASA would disagree
with those goals.
That is why after reviewing Col. Bachmann’s
committee’s report I decided that this subcommittee needed to hold a
hearing to examine the report’s findings and recommendations.
However, my decision was not made for the reason you might
think.
While there has been a great deal of attention
given to the finding related to alcohol use – and I have little
doubt that there will be discussion of that finding at today’s
hearing too – I think we do a real disservice to the independent
review committee if we ignore the warning flags they are raising
about the state of communications within the agency on both medical
and behavioral matters affecting the astronauts.
Let me read just a few of the findings from the
report that I think should concern us all:
“Many anecdotes were related that involved
risky behaviors by astronauts that were well known to the other
astronauts and no apparent action was taken. Peers and staff fear
ostracism if they identify their own or others’ problems.”
“Several senior flight surgeons expressed their
belief that their medical opinions regarding astronaut fitness for
duty, flight safety and mission accomplishment were not valued by
leadership other than to validate that all (medical) systems were
“go” for on-time mission completion. Instances were described where
major crew medical or behavioral problems were identified to
astronaut leadership and the medical advice was disregarded. This
disregard was described as “demoralizing” to the point where they
said they are less likely to report concerns of performance
decrement. Crew members raised concerns regarding substandard
astronaut task performance which were similarly
disregarded.”
“As the review progressed, it became apparent
that major vulnerabilities, underlying root causes, and contributing
factors extend well beyond the specific medical aspects of NASA
operations…These issues are so ingrained and longstanding that it
will take senior leadership action to remediate them.”
“There is no periodic psychological evaluation
or testing conducted on astronauts. Once selected as an astronaut
candidate, astronauts have no psychological evaluation for the
remainder of their careers unless selected for long duration
missions.”
“Astronaut medical and behavioral health care
is highly fragmented…”
I don’t think anyone can listen to those findings
and think all is well with NASA’s astronaut health care system.
This subcommittee needs to hear from Col. Bachmann
the basis for his review panel’s findings.
Equally importantly, this subcommittee needs to
hear from NASA management their plans for addressing the concerns
raised by the independent review – not just the alcohol-related
ones.
Whatever the merits of focusing the agency’s
attention on trying to get employees to publicly verify or refute
reports of alcohol use that those employees had provided in
confidence to the independent review committee, I think it runs the
risk of unintentionally worsening a communications environment at
NASA in which, to quote the independent review committee: “Peers
and staff fear ostracism if they identify their own or other’s
problems.”
Instead, it may be more appropriate to take the
“disconnect” between what is being said in private and what is being
said in public by NASA personnel as another indicator that the
broader issues raised by the independent review committee warrant
close and sustained attention.
I hope that will be the approach taken in the days
and weeks ahead.
Well, we have a great deal to examine today. I
again want to welcome our witnesses, and I look forward to your
testimony.