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Rhea Seddon, MD,
Partner Rhea Seddon, MD is the former Assistant Chief
Medical Officer of the Vanderbilt Medical Group in Nashville, Tennessee and
Assistant Professor of Medical Administration and Education at Vanderbilt
University Medical Center. While at Vanderbilt, she led an initiative aimed at
improving patient safety and quality of care by the use of an aviation-based
model of Crew Resource Management. She was involved in a variety of quality
improvement efforts for the medical center. Co-author of the book, “Crew
Resource Management: The Flight Plan for Lasting Change in Patient Safety”, Dr.
Seddon serves on two Joint Commission committees addressing communication in
hospitals. She now devotes her time to speaking and consulting.
Prior to coming to Vanderbilt, Dr. Seddon spent 19 years
with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. In 1978 she was
selected as one of the first six women to enter the Astronaut Program. She flew
aboard her first Shuttle flight in 1985, deployed two satellites, operated the
Remote Manipulator Arm and performed the first echocardiography in space. She
was selected to serve as a Mission Specialist on the first Shuttle flight
dedicated entirely to the life sciences research, Spacelab Life Sciences 1, in
1991. In 1993, she was the Payload Commander in charge of all science
activities on Spacelab Life Sciences 2 and performed the first animal
dissections in space. This brought her total time in space to 30 days.
While at NASA she served in many roles including flying as
a rescue helicopter physician for the first Shuttle flights and helping to
develop the Shuttle Medical Kit and checklist for space medical operations. She
was involved in recovery operations following the Challenger accident. Since
leaving NASA, she has been appointed to numerous space advisory committees
including several Institute of Medicine committees looking at Astronaut health.
A recipient of many NASA and scientific awards, she was named as a Laurel Legend
for her lifetime contributions to aviation by Aviation Week and Space Technology
magazine in 2004 and to the Tennessee Aviation Hall of Fame in 2005.
A graduate of the University of California at Berkeley
with a degree in physiology, Dr. Seddon received her MD degree from the
University of Tennessee College of Medicine in Memphis where she completed her
residency in General Surgery. She has performed research on the effects of
nutrition in cancer patients undergoing radiation therapy. She served as an
emergency physician part-time during her residency and her years at NASA.
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