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What does “space nursing” actually look like — and is it even real yet? In this episode of The Nontraditional Nurse, I sit down with Christine Rincon, also known as The Space Nurse, a critical care nurse who is building a career at the intersection of nursing and aerospace. Right now, there is no official job title called “space nurse.” Astronauts receive only 40–60 hours of medical training. Medical emergencies in orbit rely heavily on flight surgeons back on Earth. And when you look at astronaut qualifications, it literally states that nurses do not qualify. So why is Christine advocating so strongly for nurses in space? Because as missions move from short trips to low Earth orbit toward long-duration missions to the Moon and Mars, the medical model has to evolve. Communication delays, prolonged care, risk mitigation, and human sustainability all demand a different level of medical thinking — and nurses are uniquely trained for that. In this conversation, we cover: • Christine’s journey from med-surg to trauma ICU to flight nursing • Why astronauts only receive limited medical training • The barriers nurses currently face in aerospace medicine • How nurses are already working in space-related roles (even if “nurse” isn’t in the title) • Why systems thinking and process improvement matter more than ever • The mindset shift required to position yourself in an emerging field • How nurses can start getting involved today