The question is how to build the systems that will let them thrive there.
At nineteen, a motorcycle accident took John McFall's leg — but not his trajectory. Decades later, the British Paralympic medalist and surgeon stands at the threshold of space, selected by the European Space Agency in 2022 to determine whether humanity's next frontier can be shared by those whose bodies the world once deemed unfit for it. His training is not merely personal ambition; it is a formal inquiry into whether the systems we build for space are truly built for all of us.
- McFall endures the same crushing 6G centrifuge tests as any astronaut candidate — but with the added unknown of whether his prosthetic leg will survive the forces of launch and reentry.
- Microgravity exposes a deeper problem: the prosthetic that lets him run on Earth loses its logic in weightlessness, demanding entirely new engineering solutions before any mission can proceed.
- Halfway through his evaluation, McFall is passing his tests — but the clock is ticking on whether custom prosthetics and spacecraft adaptations can be designed, tested, and certified in time.
- His progress is quietly rewriting the question: it is no longer whether a disabled astronaut can go to space, but whether space programs are willing to redesign their systems to make it possible.
John McFall was nineteen when a motorcycle accident cost him his right leg. Rather than accept that as a ceiling, he rebuilt entirely — becoming a Paralympic bronze medalist at the 2008 Beijing Games, a world champion in the 100 and 200 meters, and eventually a qualified surgeon specializing in trauma and orthopedic care. In 2022, the European Space Agency chose him for astronaut training, setting in motion something the space program had never attempted before.
The training is rigorous and unsparing. McFall has undergone centrifuge tests simulating up to 6G of force — the same gauntlet faced by every astronaut candidate — while simultaneously investigating whether his prosthetic limb can endure those conditions. The harder question, it turns out, is microgravity. On Earth, his prosthesis is fluid and functional. In weightlessness, the physics that govern it dissolve. Parabolic flights revealed that his microprocessor-controlled leg required recalibration in zero gravity, and testing on an antigravity treadmill showed he needs a more flexible prosthetic to compensate for the absence of pressure and weight.
McFall is roughly halfway through his evaluation, and nothing so far has ruled him out. But his journey carries weight far beyond his own ambitions. Should he succeed, space agencies will face a new design imperative — rethinking spacecraft, suits, and equipment to accommodate astronauts with diverse physical needs. The frontier he is crossing is not just orbital. It is the boundary between a space program built for a narrow image of the human body, and one capacious enough to reflect the full range of human life.
John McFall lost his right leg at nineteen when a motorcycle accident changed the trajectory of his life. What could have been an ending became a beginning. The British athlete refused to let the amputation define his limits. Instead, he built a second act that few would have predicted: he became a Paralympic medalist, then a surgeon, and now, at the European Space Agency's selection in 2022, he is training to become the first astronaut with a physical disability to venture into space.
McFall's athletic career began in 2005, when he turned professional as a Paralympic competitor. Three years later, he represented Great Britain at the Beijing Paralympics, where he won bronze in the 100-meter sprint. He continued to excel internationally, capturing silver at the 2006 World Adaptive Athletics Championships in Assen, Netherlands, in the same distance, and bronze in the 200 meters. By 2007, he had claimed the world title in both the 100 and 200-meter events under the IWASF banner. While pursuing these athletic achievements, McFall was also studying medicine. He completed his degree in medicine and surgery in 2014 and went on to specialize in trauma and orthopedic surgery, building a respected career in the United Kingdom and contributing to medical research.
When the European Space Agency announced in 2022 that McFall would train as an astronaut, it marked a watershed moment in space exploration. The ESA and McFall are now engaged in a groundbreaking study to determine whether people with physical disabilities can live and work in space. Maybritt Kuypers oversees the research. The training is unforgiving. McFall has subjected himself to centrifuge tests that simulate the crushing forces of launch and reentry, enduring up to 6 G's of acceleration. These are the same trials that able-bodied astronauts face, with one crucial difference: McFall must discover whether his prosthetic leg can withstand them.
The real puzzle lies in microgravity. On Earth, his prosthesis allows him to run and move with fluidity. But aboard the International Space Station, where weight vanishes, the physics change entirely. McFall has been testing different prosthetics to find one that will function in weightlessness. He trained on an antigravity treadmill that simulates the conditions of orbit and discovered that he needs a more flexible prosthetic to compensate for the loss of weight and pressure on his artificial limb. During a parabolic flight where he experienced actual weightlessness, his microprocessor-controlled prosthetic—designed for everyday use on Earth—required recalibration. The challenge is not whether he can survive space, but whether the equipment can adapt to it.
McFall is roughly halfway through his evaluation and training regimen. Nothing in his progress so far suggests he cannot reach space. He passes his tests correctly. The broader implications extend beyond one man's ambition. If McFall succeeds, the space program will need to rethink spacecraft design, spacesuits, and equipment to accommodate astronauts with diverse physical needs. His journey is personal, but it is also a test case for inclusion in humanity's next frontier. The question is no longer whether disabled people belong in space. The question is how to build the systems that will let them thrive there.
Notable Quotes
McFall is roughly halfway through his evaluation and training regimen. Nothing in his progress so far suggests he cannot reach space.— ESA training assessment
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
When McFall lost his leg at nineteen, did he ever imagine he'd end up training for space?
Almost certainly not. The motorcycle accident was a rupture. But what's striking is that he didn't retreat—he pivoted. He became an athlete, then a doctor. Those weren't consolation prizes. They were genuine achievements that built the foundation for everything that came after.
Why does the ESA think a disabled astronaut is possible now, when it wasn't before?
Because they finally asked the right question. Instead of asking whether disability disqualifies someone, they asked whether space itself could be adapted. That's a different inquiry entirely. McFall is the test case, but the real innovation is the willingness to redesign the environment rather than reject the person.
The prosthetic leg in microgravity—that seems like the hardest problem to solve.
It is, but it's also solvable. On Earth, gravity does half the work for him. In space, the prosthetic has to do more. He's already discovered that his everyday prosthetic needs recalibration in weightlessness. That's not a failure. That's data. Engineers can use it to build something better.
What happens if he makes it to the ISS? Does everything change?
For him, yes—he becomes the first. But more importantly, it signals that the space program can accommodate people it previously excluded. That opens doors. Other disabled people will train. Spacecraft will be designed differently. The infrastructure of space exploration shifts.
Is there pressure on him to succeed?
Immense. But he's already succeeded in ways that matter. He's halfway through the training and passing his tests. He's proven the concept works. Whether he actually reaches orbit, the barrier has already been broken.