Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 January 2020
NASA has put people in unique and extreme environments for over six decades. Supporting these individuals with a comprehensive health-care system has evolved over this period. As the Apollo program ended and NASA began to contemplate a space shuttle and space station program, societal pressures in the late 1960s and early 1970s caused federal agencies such as NASA to reconsider how to link the needs of the space program with a growing pressure to address societal needs by forging interagency partnerships. The Space Technology Applied to the Rural Papago Health Care (STARPAHC) project provides an example of how NASA sought to balance these two imperatives in an age of diminishing federal support. This project can provide lessons for today’s uncertain budgetary future for agencies such as NASA, which are once again being asked to find creative and innovative ways to support their missions while demonstrating their larger value to society.
The authors recognize the University of Arizona Archives and Drs. Jeremy Greene and Victor Breitberg for their contributions in their efforts in reviewing STARPAHC historical records and oral histories. In addition, we extend our thanks and appreciation to those who participated in STARPAHC and who have studied it over the past five decades. We thank Jeremy Greene for his comments on this article.
Disclaimer: The opinions expressed here are the personal views of the authors and do not represent the views of Duquesne University, University of Cincinnati, or NASA.
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30. Congressional Record, 21 March 1975 (Humphrey); 2 May 1974 (Moss); 31 July 1974 (Mondale); 30 May 1974, and 5 June 1974 (Teague), in ATS-6 File, file #5652, NASA HRC. This is not an exhaustive listing in the Congressional Record.
31. See, for example, Lyndon Johnson, “Memorandum on the Need for ‘Creative Federalism’ Through Cooperation with State and Local Officials, 11 November 1966, available from https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/documents/memorandum-the-need-for-creative-Federalism-through-cooperation-with-state-and-local (accessed 11 January 2019). Johnson’s successor, Richard Nixon, embraced a different vision of federalism known as “new Federalism.” See Richard Nixon, “Address to the Nation on Domestic Programs,” 8 August 1969, available at https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/documents/address-the-nation-domestic-programs (accessed 11 January 2019). A fuller discussion of Nixon’s understanding of Federalism can be found in Bruce Katz, “Nixon’s New Federalism 45 Years Later,” The Avenue (Washington, DC: Brookings Institution), available from https://www.brookings.edu/blog/the-avenue/2014/08/11/nixons-new-Federalism-45-years-later/.
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48. Bashshur, Technology Serves the People, 69, notes that only a quarter of Papago families owned motor vehicles.
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55. Bashshur, Technology Serves the People, 70–71, 77, 73.
56. Boeing Site Selection Report Appendix A to 5-2720-Hou-2-161. John P. McGovern Historical Center, HAM-TMC Library, Houston.
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59. Chronology of Events Leading to IMBLMS Site Selection, attachment to 4 April 1973 memo from Charles Berry to George Low, box 4 of STARPAHC/Papago Indians, 1971–75, National Library of Medicine, Bethesda. In this same file, there is a 6 April 1973 letter from David Sencer, Assistant Surgeon General, to Stuart Rabeau, Director of IHS ORD, informing him of this decision.
60. Rife and Dellapenna, Caring and Curing, 77.
61. Memo of 4 April from Chuck Berry to George Low in document 3.54 STARPAHC Record of Transfer.
62. Bashshur, Technology Serves the People, 88–90, 98, 3–8, and Rife and Dellapenna, Caring and Curing, 77–78.
63. STARPAHC Record of Transfer, document 3.54 from University of Arizona STARPAHC files, 30 April 1977, 3, 8 and 38 (Appendix C).
64. Bashshur Technology Serves the People, 90–91, 99.
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68. Pool and Johnston presentation to Royal Society of Medicine, Leyden, Netherlands, 11 October 1974, 9.
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