The American workforce is changing, creating new challenges for employers to provide
occupational health services to meet the needs of employees. The National
Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) workforce is highly skilled and competitive
and employees frequently work under intense pressure to ensure mission success.
The Office of the Chief Health and Medical Officer at NASA requested that the
Institute of Medicine review its occupational health programs, assess employee awareness
of and attitude toward those programs, recommend options for future worksite
preventive health programs, and ways to evaluate their effectiveness. The committee's
findings show that although NASA has a history of being forward-looking in designing
and improving health and wellness programs, there is a need to move from a
traditional occupational health model to an integrated, employee-centered program
that could serve as a national model for both public and private employers to emulate
and improve the health and performance of their workforces.Table of Contents
Front Matter
Executive Summary
1 The NASA Worksite
2 Occupational and Preventative Health at NASA
3 Workforce Health, Performance, Readiness, Resilience: The Case for Change
4 Organizing and Managing Employee Integrated Health Programs and Policies
5 Implementing Integrated Health Programs
6 Data Integration and Health Management
Appendix A: Glossary of Terms and Abbreviations
Appendix B: Open Session and Workshop Agendas
Appendix C: Committee Member Biographical Sketches