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NASA: Crew-11 astronauts in good shape after medical evacuation and splashdown
Summary
NASA says the four Crew-11 astronauts returned early after a crewmember required medical treatment unavailable on the ISS, and the Crew Dragon Endeavour splashed down safely near San Diego on Jan. 15; officials say the affected crewmember is doing fine.
Content
NASA says the four astronauts of SpaceX's Crew-11 mission are in good condition after an early return to Earth following a medical issue aboard the International Space Station. One crew member needed diagnosis and treatment not available on the station, so NASA elected to bring the full crew home weeks early. A SpaceX Crew Dragon Endeavour capsule carried the four crew members back to Earth in a Pacific Ocean splashdown near San Diego on Jan. 15. Agency leaders described the situation as non-emergency and highlighted the team's readiness.
Known details:
- The mission was shortened because a crewmember experienced a medical issue requiring care not available on the ISS.
- The Crew-11 spacecraft Endeavour splashed down in the Pacific near San Diego on Jan. 15.
- NASA officials, including Administrator Jared Isaacman, said the medical issue was never an emergency and that the affected crewmember is "doing fine."
- Crew-11 spent just under 170 days in space and conducted about 900 hours of hands-on science across roughly 140 experiments.
- The ISS is now staffed by three people: NASA astronaut Chris Williams and Russian cosmonauts Sergey Kud-Sverchkov and Sergei Mikayev.
Summary:
NASA characterized the safe, early return of Crew-11 as a result of training and preparedness and said it will provide more information about the crewmember's condition when appropriate. Upcoming agency activities noted in the report include the Crew-12 launch currently set for Feb. 15 and Artemis 2 as early as Feb. 6. The station is temporarily staffed by three crew members, and further operational details are undetermined at this time.
