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NASA completes first medical evacuation from space station
NASA marked a historic moment early Thursday by conducting the first medical evacuation from the International Space Station in its 25 years of continuous human presence. The SpaceX Dragon capsule carrying four astronauts from the Crew-11 mission splashed down in the Pacific Ocean off San Diego, California, at 3:41 a.m. Eastern Time. The crew included NASA astronauts Zena Cardman and Mike Fincke, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency astronaut Kimiya Yui, and Roscosmos cosmonaut Oleg Platonov, wrapping up a 167-day mission shortened by about a month.
The crew undocked from the station's Harmony module at 5:20 p.m. Eastern Time on Wednesday, positioned roughly 260 miles south of Australia, for a 10.5-hour return journey. NASA announced on January 8 its decision to bring Crew-11 home early after a medical issue arose with one astronaut. "I concluded that it is in the best interest of our astronauts to return Crew-11 ahead of their scheduled departure," stated NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman during a press conference last week, describing the condition as a "serious medical issue" requiring Earth-based evaluation. The agency withheld the astronaut's identity and health details for privacy reasons but confirmed the individual remains stable.
The medical situation first surfaced on January 7, prompting NASA to abruptly cancel a planned spacewalk involving Cardman and Fincke. Dr. James Polk, NASA's director of human spaceflight health and chief medical officer, clarified that the issue stemmed from the microgravity environment rather than an operational injury. Fincke addressed the matter in a LinkedIn post from orbit earlier this week, noting the affected crew member was "stable, safe, and well cared for" and calling the evacuation a "deliberate decision to enable appropriate medical evaluations on Earth, where the full spectrum of diagnostic capabilities exists."
Recovery teams secured the Dragon capsule off the California coast, with the four astronauts now headed to a local hospital for further checks before returning to NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston. The ISS continues operations with a reduced crew of three NASA astronaut Chris Williams and Russian cosmonauts Sergei Kud-Sverchkov and Sergei Mikayev until SpaceX Crew-12 arrives in early February. NASA streamed the return live on NASA+, Amazon Prime, and its YouTube channel.