• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

The First Wheelchair User To Travel To Space Is About To Make History

December 12, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin has announced the participants on its next space tourist flight, the 37th launch for the New Shepard rocket configuration, and one crew member is of particular note. Engineer Michi Benthaus will become the first wheelchair user to fly above the edge of space.

The date of the flight has not been announced yet, just the passengers. They are Michaela (Michi) Benthaus, Joey Hyde, Hans Koenigsmann, Neal Milch, Adonis Pouroulis, and Jason Stansell. These six will be joining the already 80 people who have taken a trip in the Blue Origin rocket. Six of these 80 have actually traveled more than once.

They will fly to the edge of space, the so-called Karman Lin, located 100 kilometers (61 miles) above sea level, though it is just a convenient demarcation; there are no physical changes happening to the atmosphere there.

Benthaus is an aerospace and mechatronics engineer at the European Space Agency. She’s an advocate for greater access to space, and she has previously completed both an analog astronaut training program and a Zero G flight.

The European Space Agency actually has plans to send a person with a physical disability to the International Space Station (ISS). Former Paralympian, now surgeon and astronaut, John McFall is the first disabled astronaut to be cleared for a long-duration mission to the ISS by feasibility studies.

These studies were to understand how microgravity would affect McFall’s body. He lost his lower right leg, from just above the knee, and tests were conducted in simulated microgravity, such as the Zero G flight, to see how bodily fluid shifts in an amputated limb.

The 18 months’ worth of studies confirm that people with disabilities such as his can safely and successfully travel to space. The next phase is to study the use of a prosthesis in microgravity. For now, McFall is part of the ESA Astronaut Reserve, training to be an astronaut, hopefully, for a mission to the ISS.

Accessibility in space is a topic that appears to have not been widely explored, despite the vast number of people with disabilities around the world. About 1 in 4 adults in the US has a disability. Benthaus’ flight will be short, only about 10 minutes, up to the edge of space and back, but it will be significant. It has taken over five decades of human space flight to get the first person with a physical disability to reach space. And it’s not insignificant that it is a private space trip and not a government-funded space agency doing it.

There have been criticisms of Blue Origin in terms of who gets access to these space tourism flights, especially following the first all-female space tourist flight earlier this year, which included Katy Perry, Gayle King, and Lauren Sánchez, Jeff Bezos’s new wife. The whole affair was a PR disaster that failed to raise awareness of the very issue it aimed to highlight: women in space. Still, it did make history for something no space agency has yet managed.

Benthaus’ flight will certainly have a record, but its long-term impact on accessibility and inclusion in space exploration is hard to fathom. It’s unlikely this will be something the current iteration of NASA will explore, since the space agency has so far followed the Trump Administration’s executive orders and purged all mention of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI), which includes disabilities and support, from its initiatives.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Leasing firms now buy more planes than ailing airlines – industry pioneer
  2. UK’s Sunak says he does not want more tax increases
  3. NASA Is Opening The OSIRIS-REx Cannister Live Today. Here’s How To Watch
  4. Stock Up On Food, Water, And Fuel Ahead Of The Eclipse, Emergency Officials Warn

Source Link: The First Wheelchair User To Travel To Space Is About To Make History

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • There Used To Be 27 Letters In The English Alphabet, Until One Mysteriously Vanished
  • Why You Need To Stop Chucking That “Liquid Gold” Down Your Kitchen Sink
  • Youngest Mammoth Fossils Ever Found Turn Out To Be Whales… 400 Kilometers From The Coast
  • The First Wheelchair User To Travel To Space Is About To Make History
  • “It Was Bigger Than A Killer Whale”: 66 Million-Year-Old Tooth Suggests Mosasaurs Were Hunting In Rivers, Not Just Seas
  • Killer Whales And Dolphins Team Up In First-Ever Footage Of Cooperative Hunting
  • Why Does Chocolate In Advent Calendars Taste Different From Normal Chocolate?
  • Why Do Sheep And Goats Have Rectangular Pupils?
  • What Kind Of Parents Were Dinosaurs?
  • First Images Of A Tatooine-Like Planet That Orbits Its Two Stars Closer Than We’ve Seen Before
  • JWST Finds Earliest Supernova Yet, From When The Universe Was Just 730 Million Years Old
  • How A Comet On Christmas Day Changed What We Knew About Space
  • What Color Was Diplodocus? First-Ever Sauropod Fossils With Melanosomes Bring Us A Step Closer To Finding Out
  • Why Do NASA’s Voyager Spacecraft Sometimes Get Closer To Earth, As They Head Out Of The Solar System?
  • What Is The Fastest Animal In The World?
  • Would The Burglars Have Survived “Home Alone”? We Asked An Intensive Care Doctor
  • World’s First-Ever Dictionary Of Ancient Celtic Languages Set To Be Created
  • Fresh From Capturing Image Of 3I/ATLAS, NASA’s MAVEN Suffers “Anomaly” And Is No Longer Communicating With Earth
  • Thought “Superflu” Was Bad? Strap In: It’s Norovirus Season In The US
  • Why Does Evolution Turn Everything Into Crabs?
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version