Participate in the 12NHPSUCG, and hear Prof. Annegret Hannawa's speech on Horizons Of Safe Communication: What Have We (Not Yet) Done?

 


About Prof. Annegret Hannawa

At the Università della Svizzera Italiana, Annegret F. Hannawa, Ph.D., is a tenured Associate Professor of Health Communication and the director of the Center for the Promotion of Healthcare Quality & Patient Safety (CAHQS). She also works as an Honorary Research Associate at Cardiff University's School of Medicine and Associate Faculty at the Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University (UK). ISCOME Global Institute for the Advancement of Communication Science in Healthcare, which facilitates multidisciplinary research collaborations between top academics in communication science and healthcare to improve safe practise all over the world, was formed and is led by Prof. Hannawa. Prof. Hannawa's research focuses on the function of interpersonal communication in optimising the safety & quality of care. Her work has been honoured with multiple international honours and has been published in a number of prestigious journals. Her most recent honour was the Jozien Bensing Research Prize (2016) for exceptional career impact and achievements. The National Communication Association gave her book "Communication Competence" a competitive "Book-of-the-Year" award (NCA). Some of her empirical investigations got "Top Paper Awards" by the NCA and the Swiss Patient Safety Foundation. Her "SACCIA Safe Communication" abilities for medicine and nursing were translated into the case studies book "New Horizons for Patient Safety: Understanding Communication" published in 2017.

SPEAKER ANNOUNCEMENT: We are happy to announce that Prof. Annegret Hannawa will be presenting her speech on "Horizons Of Safe Communication: What Have We (Not Yet) Done?" at the CME/CPD accredited 12th International Nursing, Healthcare, and Patient Safety Conference on July 25-27, 2023 in Dubai, UAE & enhance your knowledge on Nursing, Healthcare and patient safety.

Avail slot & Certifications by registering here: https://nursing-healthcare.universeconferences.com/

The New Horizons Team Reacts to a Spacecraft Error

There was an anomaly that prevented the New Horizons spacecraft from communicating with Earth. Since then, communication has been restored, and the spacecraft is in good condition.

At 1:54 p.m. EDT, the mission control centre at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland, lost contact with the unmanned spacecraft, which is now 10 days away from reaching Pluto. At 3:15 p.m. EDT, the mission control centre reestablished contact with New Horizons via NASA's Deep Space Network.

During that time, the spacecraft's autonomous autopilot identified a malfunction and switched to the backup computer, as it was planned to do in that circumstance. The backup computer was instructed by the autopilot to restart connection with Earth after entering "safe mode" on the spaceship. Afterwards, New Horizons started to broadcast telemetry to assist engineers in identifying the issue.

At 4 p.m. EDT, a meeting of the New Horizons Anomaly Review Board (ARB) was called to discuss the issue and begin developing a recovery strategy. Currently, the crew is focusing on getting New Horizons back on its original flight path. Full recovery is anticipated to take one to several days due to the 9-hour communication delay caused by operating a spacecraft over 3 billion miles (4.9 billion kilometres) from Earth; New Horizons will be temporarily unable to gather science data during that time.

When will it be finished? Well, two-way light time between New Horizons and Earth is nine hours. They had to command that sometime after they made contact again at 3:15 pm EDT / 19:15 UT, so they won't receive the information until the early hours of their morning. It sounds like they want additional information from the spacecraft before deciding on the best course of action. They'll presumably have come up with a list of explanations for the oddity in the interim. They might theoretically send a command later tomorrow AM ET to return the spacecraft to science if the new information they receive tomorrow morning supports one of their hypotheses and is benign, leaving a scientific gap of little over a day. If they're still unsure that they comprehend the spacecraft's health, it might require at least one more round of communication that lasts nine hours, followed by another meeting that takes up the majority of another day.

Safe modes are terrifying and bothersome but not uncommon and not, at this point, anything that New Horizons supporters should be stressing out about. I'll be the first to confess that I was a little frightened out when I initially got this news, but I have faith in the team to handle it and get the mission back to normal operations without any major science losses.

It will take some time before I can write an update once I have any fresh information to share due to the nine-hour wait.

NASA's New Horizons mission is back to regular science activities and is still on schedule to pass near Pluto.

According to the findings of the inquiry into the anomaly that sent New Horizons into "safe mode" on July 4, there was no hardware

 or software malfunction on the spacecraft. A difficult to see timing error in the spacecraft command sequence that happened during an operation to get ready for the close flyby was the actual cause of the mishap. During the duration of the Pluto encounter, no such actions are anticipated.

As scheduled, science operations will restart, and preparations are being made to carry out the whole close flyby sequence. The mission scientific team and principal investigator have determined that the science observations missed during the anomaly recovery had little to no impact on secondary mission goals and no impact on any primary mission goals. "In terms of science, it won't turn an A-plus even into an A," stated New Horizons Principle Investigator Alan Stern of the Southwest Research Institute, Boulder. Due to the spacecraft's great distance from Earth, recovery will be extremely difficult. New Horizons is approximately 3 billion miles away, where radio signals, even moving at light speed, need 4.5 hours to get home. A nine-hour round journey is needed for two-way communication between the spacecraft and its operators.

A casual format for presenting research findings or showcasing cutting-edge techniques is the poster session. The CME/CPD accredited 12th International Nursing, Healthcare, and Patient Safety Conference offers you the chance to present your original ideas in a less formal setting than a paper presentation. Submit your paper, and join us in Dubai, UAE, from July 25–27, 2023. Submit here: https://nursing-healthcare.universeconferences.com/submit-abstract/
You can visit here:
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Register your slot here:
https://nursing-healthcare.universeconferences.com/registration/
Email us at
nursing@universeconferences.net
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