Confirm your location

Confirm you location or select from a list of countries in order to get in touch with your local Ottobock market. We will make sure you´re redirected to your selected site in the future so you´ll always be in the right place.

Paralympic Games 2024

Introducing the Unofficial Discipline.

A young man in a wheelchair holding a tennis racket and looking up a stairwell
A young man in a wheelchair holding a tennis racket and looking up a stairwell
A young man in a wheelchair holding a tennis racket and looking up a stairwell
Not official, but real

What is the Unofficial Discipline?

Every day over one billion people living with a form of disability compete in an invisible competition against inaccessibility. They fight staircases, broken elevators, and prejudices. In 2024, as the world converges on Paris for the Paralympic Games, we introduce a symbolic 24th discipline: The Unofficial Discipline, made of everyday hurdles that individuals with disabilities encounter every day, shining a spotlight on obstacles invisible to able bodied people.

With support from the the International Paralympic Committee and by Ottobock’s global ambassador network, our mission is clear: to start conversations about physical and non-physical barriers, foster understanding, and catalyze change in how we perceive and address accessibility. Because we can only win when everyone can cross the finish line.

Blue pictogram including stairs, a prosthetic arm and leg, and a wheelchair in the center to showcase the various avenues of accessibility.

The daily competition that shouldn’t be a competition.

Whether it is battling stereotypes, unforeseen challenges when traveling, or overall inaccessibility in daily life that make going from A to B a hurdle race — we invite you to use your voice and share your Unofficial Discipline using #UnofficialDiscipline to raise awareness. Let’s break the record in breaking barriers!

Meet the athletes and their stories

Meet the athletes and their Unofficial Disciplines.

Almost nothing can stop a gold-winning para-athlete in the stadium. In everyday life, however, they can still be hindered by inaccessibility. But shouldn't their chosen discipline be enough? Learn about their #UnofficialDiscipline.

An athletic man using the leg press machine while sporting an arm and leg prosthesis.

Davide Morana

Italian Davide Morana is a para-athlete best known for his sprinting achievements. However, the speed that he brings to the track is hardly translatable to everyday life where the increased integration of touch screens can be time-consuming and tedious for a double-arm amputee.

Italian Davide Morana is a para-athlete best known for his sprinting achievements. However, the speed that he brings to the track is hardly translatable to everyday life where the increased integration of touch screens can be time-consuming and tedious for a double-arm amputee.

Young, athletic blond woman with braids standing on a race track in a sports hall and looking directly into the camera.

Desiree Vila Bargiela

While others only think about the competition when they travel Spanish para athlete Desirée Vila Bargiela who is among the top five long jumpers in the world, constantly has to question whether the hotel she is staying in will have a shower she can use comfortably when she is not using her prosthesis.

While others only think about the competition when they travel Spanish para athlete Desirée Vila Bargiela who is among the top five long jumpers in the world, constantly has to question whether the hotel she is staying in will have a shower she can use comfortably when she is not using her prosthesis.

An athlete wearing a prosthetic leg and running blade sprinting on a red race track.

Alessandro Ossola

Alessandro Ossola is an Italian Paralympic sprinter who has achieved significant success in international competitions, notably winning medals in the World Para Athletics European Championships. While there is hardly anything he can’t do today, he worries about the future and how the healthcare system will support him when he’s an older amputee.

Alessandro Ossola is an Italian Paralympic sprinter who has achieved significant success in international competitions, notably winning medals in the World Para Athletics European Championships. While there is hardly anything he can’t do today, he worries about the future and how the healthcare system will support him when he’s an older amputee.

A woman in a pink racing wheelchair and helmet on a racing track, raising her fist and smiling as she competes.

Samantha Kinghorn

Samantha Kinghorn is a Scottish Paralympic wheelchair racer who has achieved notable success, including winning multiple gold medals at the World Para Athletics Championships and competing in the Paralympic Games. Yet her biggest challenge remains doors that open the wrong way which means that as a wheelchair user, she can't enter without assistance.

Samantha Kinghorn is a Scottish Paralympic wheelchair racer who has achieved notable success, including winning multiple gold medals at the World Para Athletics Championships and competing in the Paralympic Games. Yet her biggest challenge remains doors that open the wrong way which means that as a wheelchair user, she can't enter without assistance.

An athletic man with a prosthetic leg and running blade jumping on an athletic track.

Leon Schäfer

Germany's Léon Schäfer has won multiple world and European titles in the Para long jump and sprint. However, his biggest hurdle remains to obtain a driver's license, as even driving schools that claim to be for people with disabilities aren’t educated enough on the topic.

Germany's Léon Schäfer has won multiple world and European titles in the Para long jump and sprint. However, his biggest hurdle remains to obtain a driver's license, as even driving schools that claim to be for people with disabilities aren’t educated enough on the topic.

A man high jumping with his body upside down.

Ezra Frech

Para world record holder in high Jump and phenomenal sprinter, American Ezra Frech's Unofficial Discipline starts in the bathroom. While he seamlessly conquers jumps as high as 1.95 m in competitions, inaccessible bathrooms such as those with barriers in front of the shower or the bathtub pose not only a real challenge but also a risk to him.

Para world record holder in high Jump and phenomenal sprinter, American Ezra Frech's Unofficial Discipline starts in the bathroom. While he seamlessly conquers jumps as high as 1.95 m in competitions, inaccessible bathrooms such as those with barriers in front of the shower or the bathtub pose not only a real challenge but also a risk to him.

More stories

Learn more about their Unofficial Discipline.

A young woman with a prosthetic leg sitting on a chair and laughing, wearing a pink suit, a turban, and high heels.

“People making assumptions can be challenging.”

Zainab Al Eqabi is an inspiring Iraqi influencer, para-athlete, TV show host, and the first and largest female empowerment icon with a disability in the Middle East. Despite her long list of achievements, people constantly assume and or speak for what she can and can not do, thereby making it her personal Unofficial Discipline.

The difficult part is when people say I can't do something — not because I'm unable, but because they believe that having a disability means I can't.

Bebe Vio, Italian para-fencer and multiple paralympic gold medalist

Paralympic athelete, Bebe Vio, wearing a grey and blue full-body suit in a wheelchair, holding a fencing sword during a competition.
Activations in Paris

The Unofficial Discipline in Paris.

You shouldn’t have to bring on your A-game to get from A to B.

To raise awareness, we’ve strategically placed billboards, posters, and projections in Paris during the Paralympic Games. These installations are placed on staircases or popular tourist attractions and highlight the campaign’s message. However, Paris is just the beginning. The campaign will soon roll out to other cities around the World. We understand that our mission to break down barriers is not a sprint but a marathon, and it’s crucial to recognize the progress that is already underway. If we defeat all barriers we all win!

Painted staircase in blue with light blue text in an urban setting, it reads: ready, set, stairs.

Questions? Contact us.