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Healthcare devices sent to orbit for space testing

By CHEN MEILING in Beijing and CHEN HONG in Shenzhen | CHINA DAILY | Updated: 2026-04-02 07:32
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A Lijian-2 Y1 carrier rocket carrying three satellites blasts off from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in Northwest China on March 30. Five cutting-edge healthcare devices developed by the Shenzhen University of Advanced Technology will undergo three years of in-orbit tests. [Photo by Cao Hongzu/For chinadaily.com.cn]

China recently sent five advanced healthcare devices into orbit aboard an experimental vessel, marking the nation's first practical step toward realizing its dream of building a hospital in space. The devices will be tested in orbit over the next three years, with the primary goal of advancing astronaut healthcare and space medicine research.

The spacecraft carrying the devices was launched from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northwestern China on Monday, according to Shenzhen University of Advanced Technology, based in Guangdong province, which is leading the project in collaboration with the Chinese Academy of Sciences' Innovation Academy for Microsatellites in Shanghai.

As of Wednesday, the topic "Shenzhen builds a hospital in space" had garnered 4.63 million hits on Chinese social media platform Sina Weibo. "It feels like science fiction has come to life. It's truly amazing! Modern technology is simply beyond imagination," a user commented.

The test project is expected to address health challenges in space posed by microgravity, radiation and confined environments. Astronauts face several health risks in such conditions, including bone density loss, muscle atrophy, slowed wound healing, cardiovascular changes and psychological stress.

Zhu Dijian, Party secretary of the university, noted that growing competition in space exploration has made astronauts' health a key research focus. "Amid increasingly fierce global competition in space, China has been making sustained efforts to fill technological gaps," he said.

Xu Zhiming, president of the university's College of Clinical Medicine and executive director of its Future Medical Center, said that a microgravity environment can reduce skeletal loading and affect blood circulation, radiation can damage the skin and endocrine system, and the confined space can influence mental health.

The project aims to expand in-orbit medical monitoring and life support systems for astronauts and future space tourists, he added.

China plans to send its astronauts to the moon by 2030 and has also pledged support for commercial space travel, pointing to the need for in-orbit medical support.

According to Xu, the five devices are currently designed for remote operation in space, and they are capable of transferring data back to Earth in real time. "Future experiments will involve using the devices on animals — and even humans — in space," he said.

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