It’s not an issue limited to football, of course. Participants in other high-impact sports such as rugby are at risk as well — to say nothing of men and women in the military. The current standard for protective headgear, while it doubtless saves many lives, just isn’t good enough. That’s why the Head Health Challenges were started. A partnership between the NFL, Under Armour, GE, and the National Institute of Standards and Technology has invested $20 million in a series of “challenges” designed to spur innovation in the detection and prevention of traumatic brain injuries.
The first two challenges, which took place in 2014, focused on diagnosis and prevention. Head Health Challenge III, entitled “Advanced Materials for Impact Mitigation,” asked participants to develop and design novel materials for the purpose of creating better protective headgear. The Head Health Challenge, which consists of several phases, will announce a grand prize winner in the autumn of 2016; the winners of the first round were announced yesterday.
“Head injury prevention strategies have remained relatively stagnant versus the evolution of other technologies,” said Dr. Peter Theobald, a lecturer at Cardiff University and one of the project leads. “Our trans-Atlantic collaboration with Charles Owen Inc. has enabled us to pool our highly relevant skills and expertise in injury prevention, mechanics, manufacturing and commercialisation. This approach has already enabled us to develop C3 which shows great promise to better absorb the vertical and horizontal components of an oblique impact. This highly prestigious award provides us with a platform to continue developing C3 towards our ultimate goal of achieving a material that provides a step-change in head health and protection, whilst achieving metrics that ensure commercial viability.”
Researchers from the School of Engineering will work with Charles Owen Inc. over the next year to further develop and test the material. Winning the first round in Head Health Challenge III means that the team will be awarded $250,000 to further their efforts. The grand prize winner will be given $500,000 at the end of next year.
“My grandfather, Charles Owen, started making helmets to protect the British soldiers in 1911 before moving onto motorcycle helmets in 1925, and then equestrian helmets (particularly jockey helmets) in 1938,” said Roy Burek, President and CEO of Charles Owen Inc. “This long and illustrious record in manufacturing innovative products that increase head safety has kept the brand at the center of helmet development for over 100 years. It has only been in the past 15 years that our knowledge of how the brain is injured and how to best protect it has dramatically changed along with the design and manufacture of helmets. I am thrilled to be part of a project that pushes the development of totally new protective technologies and materials so that we can better prevent brain injuries in multiple areas.”
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