A new generation of hard hats is promising better protection against on-the-job concussions, also known as mild traumatic brain injuries.
These hard hats incorporate technology that not only protects the head from a direct impact, but also from a glancing blow that causes the head to rotate suddenly – a major cause of concussions.
"The human brain is readily injured by a rotational force," says
Michael Bottlang
So Bottlang and
Dr. Steven Madey
The WaveCel hard hat is just the latest effort to update the products, known as industrial safety helmets, which brain injury experts say are overdue for an upgrade.
"Unfortunately, today's most frequently used hard hats look identical to the ones from the '60s," Bottlang says.
MIPS, a Swedish company, offers
a competing technology
Upgraded helmets like these, "are keeping the brain more stationary, and that has a lot of potential benefit," says
Dr. Brandon Lucke-Wold
Understanding workplace concussions
About one-fourth of all concussions among adults occur on the job, especially at construction sites. Falls, which often cause the head to turn or tip suddenly, are the most frequent cause.
One reason workplace brain injuries are so common is that hard hats — unlike sports helmets — haven't changed much since their invention a century ago.
Lucke-Wold, who often treats patients with brain injuries, wears a state-of-the art bike helmet during his daily commute.
"But the construction workers I saw biking home today were wearing hard hats that are very similar to what I saw 10 to 15 years ago," he says.
A typical hard hat consists of a plastic outer shell with an inner suspension system made from webbing. Some models include foam padding on the sides and a chin strap.
This design is good at protecting the brain from direct hit, say a hammer dropped by a worker two stories up. But traditional hard hats aren't so good when the impact comes at an angle.
Studies show that's because an
oblique impact
The reason is that the brain is a bit like an egg yoke — a soft capsule surrounded by liquid, and contained inside a hard shell.
You can shake an egg forcefully without disrupting the contents. But experiments show that if you
spin one hard enough
Most hard hats act like an egg shell.
"They do a job at reducing force, so they serve a purpose," Madey says. "But if they're not optimized to decrease the spin, they're not optimized to prevent injury."
A helmet that works like sand
Madey and Bottlang initially founded WaveCel to make better sports helmets.
Their inspiration came from observing what happens to a ball when it strikes the ground at an angle, the way a biker's head often does in a crash.
The ball doesn't just bounce, Madey says. "It will hit the ground, it'll have friction and it'll create spin."
Unless the ground is made of sand.
"If you throw a ball into a sandpit, the sand gives underneath, it doesn't impart spin to the ball," Madey says. And the ball doesn't bounce.
So Madey and Bottlang developed a helmet liner made from a special plastic honeycomb designed to act like sand.
"The honeycomb structure is a very light, breathable material that is not only good at absorbing linear force, but also breaks that spin the way sand would," Madey says.
The WaveCel liner can be found in several big-brand sports helmets.
An independent
study found
One potential barrier to widespread acceptance of the new helmets is price.
WaveCel hard hats cost $169 to $189, which is several times the amount for a standard hard hat and more than many premium models, including some with MIPS technology.
"If I have one goal in the next few years, it's to bring the price down," Bottlang says.
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