Michael R. Barratt

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Michael Reed Barratt
NASA Astronaut
Status Active
Born April 16, 1959 (1959-04-16) (age 50)
Vancouver, Washington
Other occupation Physician
Previous occupation Flight surgeon
Selection 2000 NASA Group
Missions Soyuz TMA-14, Expedition 19
Mission insignia

Michael Reed Barratt, (born April 16 1959) is an American physician and a NASA astronaut. Specializing in aerospace medicine, Barratt served as a flight surgeon for NASA before his selection as an astronaut, and has played a role in developing NASA's space medicine programs for both the Shuttle-Mir Program and International Space Station. He is a Flight Engineer on Expedition 19, his first flight, and will continue his stay as part of the Expedition 20 crew.

Contents

[edit] Personal

Born April 16 1959 in Vancouver, Washington, Barratt considers Camas, Washington, to be his home town. He is married to Dr. Michelle Lynne Barratt (née Sasynuik); they have five children. His father and mother, Joseph and Donna Barratt, reside in Camas. His personal and recreational interests include family and church activities, writing, sailing, boat restoration and maintenance.

[edit] Education

Barratt graduated from Camas High School, in 1977. He graduated the University of Washington in 1981 with a Bachelor's degree in Zoology, going on to earn a medical degree from Northwestern University in 1985. He completed a three year residency in Internal Medicine at Northwestern University in 1988; his Chief Residency year was at Veterans Administration Lakeside Hospital in Chicago, in 1989. In 1991 Barratt completed a residency and Master’s program in Aerospace Medicine jointly run by Wright State University, NASA, and Wright-Patterson Air Force Base[1]. He is board certified in Internal and Aerospace Medicine.

Barratt holds a private pilot's license and has been qualified on NASA's T-38 Talons.[1]

[edit] NASA career

Barratt first worked at NASA Johnson Space Center in May 1991, employed as aerospace project physician with KRUG Life Sciences. From May 1991 to July 1992, he served on the Health Maintenance Facility Project as manager of the Hyperbaric and Respiratory Subsystems for the defunct Space Station Freedom project. In July 1992 he was assigned as NASA flight surgeon working in Space Shuttle Medical Operations.

In July of 1993 Barratt was one of a team of the first three Americans invited to witness the recovery of a Soyuz spacecraft. Asked to help evaluate the potential of the Soyuz as a Crew Return Vehicle for a NASA space station, he flew with the recovery team that picked up the crew of Soyuz TM-16 after they landed in Kazakhstan.[1][2] (The Soyuz was ultimately chosen as the return vehicle for the International Space Station).

In January 1994 he was assigned to the Shuttle-Mir Program. He spent over 12 months working and training in the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center at Star City as one of two flight surgeons supporting Norman Thagard and his backup Bonnie Dunbar, a role that often included negotiations to resolve different approaches to medicine by NASA and Russian doctors. Barratt and fellow flight surgeon David Ward developed a Mir Supplemental Medical Kit to augment Russian equipment on Mir and developed a program of training for its use, taught to both NASA astronauts and Russian cosmonauts.[1][2]

Thagard launched to Mir aboard Soyuz TM-21 and returned to earth on STS-71; during the 115-day flight, Barratt and Ward effectively served as a CAPCOMs for the NASA Shuttle-Mir team in addition to their duties as flight surgeons.[1][2]

From July 1995 through July 1998, Barratt served as Medical Operations Lead for the International Space Station (ISS). A frequent traveler to Russia, he worked with counterparts at Star City and the Institute for Biomedical Problems as well as other ISS partner centers, developing medical procedures, training and equipment for ISS. Barratt served as lead crew surgeon for ISS Expedition 1 from July 1998 until selected as an astronaut candidate. He serves as Associate Editor for Space Medicine for the journal Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine, and is senior editor of the textbook ‘Principles of Clinical Medicine for Space Flight’.

Selected as a Mission Specialist by NASA in July 2000, Barratt reported for training in August 2000. Following the completion of two years of training and evaluation, he was assigned technical duties in the Astronaut Office Station Operations Branch. Assigned to the Expedition 19 crew in February 1998,[3] Barratt launched to the International Space Station in March 2009 aboard Soyuz TMA-14; Barratt's stay aboard the station will continue through until the end of Expedition 20.[4]

[edit] Organizations

Aerospace Medical Association; American College of Physicians; Alpha Omega Alpha Medical Honor Society; American Institute for the Advancement of Science.

[edit] Awards and honors

  • W. Randolph Lovelace Award (1998), Society of NASA Flight Surgeons
  • Rotary National Award for Space Achievement Foundation Nominee (1998)
  • Melbourne W. Boynton Award (1995), American Astronautical Society
  • USAF Flight Surgeons Julian Ward Award (1992)
  • Wright State University Outstanding Graduate Student, Aerospace Medicine (1991)
  • Alpha Omega Alpha Medical Honor Society, Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, IL (1988)
  • Phi Beta Kappa, University of Washington, Seattle, WA (1981)

[edit] References

Large portions of this article were taken from the NASA Biography of Michael R. Barratt.

  1. ^ a b c d e "Michael R. Barratt, M.D." (PDF). ISS Phase 1 History Project. NASA. 1998-04-14. http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/history/shuttle-mir/people/oral-histories/barratt.pdf. Retrieved on 2009-05-16. 
  2. ^ a b c Burrough, Bryan (1998). Dragonfly: NASA and the Crisis Aboard Mir. HarperCollins. ISBN 0-88730-783-3. 
  3. ^ "NASA Assigns Crews for STS-127 and Expedition 19 Missions". NASA. 2008. http://www.nasa.gov/home/hqnews/2008/feb/HQ_08052_Crew_Announcements.html. Retrieved on 2008-02-11. 
  4. ^ "Expedition 20". NASA. 2009-05-06. http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/expeditions/expedition20/. Retrieved on 2009-05-17. 

[edit] External links

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