The Human Algorithm: How One Patient Rewrote the Code for Robotic Exoskeletons
On a sidewalk off Park Avenue in Manhattan, the gap between science fiction and medical reality narrowed to a few inches. Robert Woo, paralyzed from the chest down since 2007, stepped out of a showroom and onto the pavement. He was not using crutches. He was not leaning on a walker. He was encased in an 80-kilogram exoskeleton from French company Wandercraft, a device capable of self-balancing propulsion that allowed him to steer with a joystick while the machine managed stability.
For bystanders, the sight was startling. For the assistive technology industry, it was a data point in a fifteen-year evolution Woo helped engineer. While the visual of a “cyborg” walking down the street captures the imagination, the underlying story is one of iterative design, regulatory hurdles and the stark difference between clinical validation and daily utility. Woo’s journey from a construction site accident in New York City to becoming a lead tester for major bionics firms illustrates both the breakthroughs and the bottlenecks defining the exoskeleton market today.
The Architect of Recovery
Woo’s involvement in bionics was not accidental; it was structural. Before his injury on December 14, 2007, Woo worked as an architect specializing in reconciling visionary designs with construction realities. When a crane accident left him with a spinal cord injury, he applied that same analytical framework to his rehabilitation. Early interactions with medical providers at Mount Sinai Hospital revealed a disconnect between available technology and user needs. Initial rehab equipment, such as the Lokomat, required multiple therapists to operate and offered little independence.
By 2011, Woo began testing early prototypes from Ekso Bionics and ReWalk (now Lifeward). These devices represented a shift from passive rehab tools to active mobility aids, utilizing motors at the hips and knees to drive movement. Yet, early models required significant upper-body strength and crutches for balance. Woo’s feedback during these clinical trials was granular. He identified heat dissipation issues in hip motors, suggested padding adjustments to prevent skin abrasions, and redesigned battery packs from cumbersome backpacks to hip-mounted pouches.
This collaboration highlights a critical dynamic in medical device development: the user as co-designer. Engineers at Ekso Bionics invited Woo to their headquarters to bridge the gap between theoretical engineering and lived experience. His input led to tangible hardware revisions in subsequent generations of devices. This feedback loop remains essential as companies like Wandercraft develop self-balancing systems that remove the need for crutches, freeing the user’s hands for daily tasks.
Regulatory Milestones and Market Access
The transition of exoskeletons from research labs to living rooms depended heavily on regulatory clearance. In 2014, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) cleared the ReWalk Personal System for home apply, marking the first time a robotic exoskeleton was approved for personal mobility outside a clinical setting. This clearance was a prerequisite for insurance coverage and broader market adoption.

Despite FDA clearance, cost remains a significant barrier. Woo purchased his home unit in 2015 for approximately $80,000 out of pocket, funded partly by a legal settlement. Insurance coverage has been sluggish to follow regulatory approval. While the Department of Veterans Affairs began supplying devices to eligible veterans in 2015, broader Medicare reimbursement policies have only recently been established for medically eligible beneficiaries. Private insurers are beginning to follow suit, but coverage is often inconsistent and requires extensive documentation of medical necessity.
Context: Regulatory Classification and Reimbursement
FDA Status: Robotic exoskeletons for spinal cord injury are typically classified as Class II medical devices, requiring 510(k) clearance to demonstrate substantial equivalence to existing predicates. Home-use models require additional safety validation.
Medicare Coverage: In recent years, Medicare Administrative Contractors have issued Local Coverage Determinations (LCDs) allowing reimbursement for exoskeletons under specific conditions, such as therapeutic use for patients with spinal cord injuries between levels T7 and L5. Coverage for purely functional home use remains more restrictive.
Market Size: Estimates suggest approximately 300,000 people in the United States live with spinal cord injuries, with millions more affected by stroke or multiple sclerosis. This potential addressable market drives continued investment despite high development costs.
The Engineering of Everyday Utility
Technical specifications often overshadow user experience in product announcements, but for exoskeleton users, environmental variables dictate usability. During a recent demonstration with the Wandercraft device, Woo encountered a safety limitation on a sidewalk slope of less than 2 percent. The device’s sensors detected the decline and halted movement to prevent a fall. While this safety feature protects the user, it limits navigation in urban environments where curb cuts and inclines are common.
Battery life and thermal management remain persistent challenges. Early models would shut down after 30 minutes due to motor overheating. Newer iterations have improved cooling and power density, yet the cognitive load of operating the device remains high. Users describe the learning curve as comparable to driving a manual transmission vehicle, requiring constant coordination between weight shifting and device input.
Reliability is another critical factor. Woo reported instances where his home unit would freeze mid-stride, requiring a reboot. In a clinical setting, a therapist can assist immediately. At home, a technical failure can leave a user stranded on the floor, dependent on a trained companion for recovery. This risk underscores why many devices still mandate a second person be present during operation, limiting true independence.
Health Outcomes Beyond Mobility
The value proposition of exoskeletons extends beyond walking. Clinical trials led by researchers such as Dr. Ann Spungen at the Veterans Affairs hospital have documented physiological benefits unrelated to mobility. Participants in structured exoskeleton programs reported reductions in narcotic pain medication, improved circulation, better digestion, and increased muscle mass.
These secondary health benefits often justify the cost and effort for users who may not achieve full-time mobility. For Woo, the psychological impact of standing eye-to-eye with peers and family members was as significant as the physical exercise. However, the novelty of the technology can wear off. Woo noted that his home unit eventually gathered dust as the practical limitations of cooking, cleaning, and navigating tight spaces became apparent. The device excelled at walking laps but struggled with the complex micro-movements required for domestic tasks.
Technical Q&A
Q: Why do most exoskeletons still require crutches?
A: Most commercial units have motors only at the hips and knees. They lack powered ankles, meaning they cannot dynamically adjust balance in real-time. Crutches provide a third point of contact to prevent falls. Self-balancing models like Wandercraft’s use advanced sensors and powered ankles to eliminate this need, but they are not yet widely available for home use.
Q: Can exoskeletons restore natural sensation?
A: No. Current devices provide mechanical movement but do not interface directly with the nervous system to restore sensory feedback. Users must rely on visual cues and proprioception from their upper body to gauge position and balance.
Q: What is the typical battery life for a home unit?
A: Most devices offer between one to three hours of active walking time per charge, depending on terrain and user weight. Here’s sufficient for exercise or short trips but generally insufficient for all-day wear.
The trajectory of exoskeleton technology suggests a future where these devices are lighter, smarter, and more integrated into daily life. However, the timeline for a true “all-day” exoskeleton that replaces a wheelchair remains estimated at a decade or more. For now, the technology serves as a hybrid solution, offering periods of upright mobility alongside traditional wheelchair use. For users like Woo, the value lies not in replacing the wheelchair entirely, but in expanding the range of what is possible within the constraints of injury.
As engineering teams continue to refine balance algorithms and power systems, the focus is shifting from proving the technology works to ensuring it works reliably in unstructured environments. The next breakthrough may not be a faster walking speed, but a device that can navigate a kitchen without freezing on a slight incline. How much autonomy are users willing to trade for safety features that might limit where they can go?






