96-19882. Petition Requesting Development of Safety Standard for Protective Batting Helmets and Staff Report  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 152 (Tuesday, August 6, 1996)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 40822-40823]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-19882]
    
    
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    CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY COMMISSION
    
    Petition Requesting Development of Safety Standard for Protective 
    Batting Helmets and Staff Report
    
    AGENCY: Consumer Product Safety Commission.
    
    ACTION: Notice.
    
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    SUMMARY: In 1994, the American Academy of Facial Plastic and 
    Reconstructive Surgery petitioned the Commission to develop a safety 
    standard for protective batting helmets used by children younger than 
    15 years of age to require these helmets to be manufactured with a face 
    guard. In 1996, the Commission staff published a report about injuries 
    to children associated with baseball and the types of protective 
    equipment currently available to prevent those injuries. The Commission 
    solicits written comments on the petition and on that portion of the 
    report concerning facial injuries and batting helmets with face 
    guards.1
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        \1\ The Commission voted 2-1 to publish this notice, with 
    Commissioner Mary Shiela Gall dissenting. Commissioner Gall's 
    statement concerning her vote is available from the Office of the 
    Secretary.
    
    DATES: Comments on the petition and the report should be received in 
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    the Office of the Secretary by September 20, 1996.
    
    ADDRESSES: Comments on the petition should be mailed to the Office of 
    the Secretary, Consumer Product Safety Commission, Washington, DC 
    20207, telephone (301) 504-0800, or delivered to the Office of the 
    Secretary, room 502, 4330 East-West Highway, Bethesda, Maryland 20814. 
    Comments should be captioned ``Petition and Report Concerning Batting 
    Helmets with Face Guards.'' Five copies are requested of each 
    submission in response to this notice.
        A copy of the petition, comments on the petition submitted before 
    July 26, 1995, and the document entitled ``Youth Baseball Protective 
    Equipment Project--Final Report'' are available for inspection at the 
    Commission's Public Reading Room, room 419, 4330 East-West Highway, 
    Bethesda, Maryland. To obtain a copy of the petition, comments on the 
    petition, or ``Youth Baseball Protective Equipment Project--Special 
    Report,'' call or write Rockelle Hammond, Office of the Secretary, 
    Consumer Product Safety Commission, Washington, D.C. 20207; telephone 
    (301) 504-0800.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For information about the petition or 
    the staff report, call or write Susan B. Kyle, Directorate for 
    Epidemiology and Health Sciences, Consumer Product Safety Commission, 
    Washington, D.C. 20207; telephone (301) 504-0470, extension 1210.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In 1994, the American Academy of Facial 
    Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery petitioned the Commission to develop 
    a safety standard for protective batting helmets intended for children. 
    The petition, designated HP 95-1, requests development of a standard 
    requiring batting helmets intended for children younger than 15 years 
    of age to be manufactured with a face guard which meets the 
    requirements of the Safety Specification for Face Guards for Youth 
    Baseball (ASTM F910), published by ASTM (formerly the American Society 
    for Testing and Materials). The petition includes two articles from the 
    journal ``Pediatrics.'' These articles state that batting-related 
    injuries are a leading cause of sports-related eye injuries and that 
    the Sports Eye Safety Committee of the National Society to Prevent 
    Blindness has endorsed requiring face guards with batting helmets. The 
    petition asserts that the use of batting helmets without face guards by 
    children younger than 15 years of age creates an unreasonable risk of 
    injury.
        In the Federal Register of November 1, 1994 (59 FR 54548), the 
    Commission published a notice to solicit written comments on the 
    petition. In response to that notice the Commission received four 
    comments, all of which urge denial of the petition.
        Two comments observe that the risk of being injured from impact of 
    the ball is inherent in the game of baseball. One of these comments 
    states that helmets meeting the requirements of the standard requested 
    by the petition would add to the frustrations of young players and 
    detract from their enjoyment of the game.
        Two other comments state that the ASTM standard for face guards 
    should not be incorporated into a mandatory standard. These comments 
    state that the adequacy of protection afforded by this standard has not 
    been adequately evaluated, and that compliance with the standard could 
    reduce the player's field of vision and access to the airway of an 
    injured player.
        In 1995, the Commission staff began a study of the circumstances 
    surrounding facial injuries associated with baseball and softball. On 
    July 14, 1995, the Commission voted to defer a decision on the petition 
    until the results of that study became available.
        In May 1996, the Commission staff completed a report entitled 
    ``Youth Baseball Protective Equipment Project--Final Report'' (the 
    Final Report). That document provides information about injuries to 
    children associated with baseball, and about protective equipment 
    available to prevent those injuries. The Final Report discusses, among 
    other things, a survey of injuries associated with baseball, softball, 
    and T-ball treated in hospital emergency rooms during the spring and 
    summer of 1995. A copy of the complete Final Report is available 
    without charge by writing or calling the Office of the Secretary, 
    Consumer Product Safety Commission, Washington, D.C. 20207; telephone 
    (301) 504-0800.
        From the survey of injuries associated with baseball, the 
    Commission staff estimates that about 37 per cent (59,400) of the total 
    youth baseball-related injuries treated in hospital emergency rooms 
    were facial injuries. About 74 per cent of these facial injuries 
    resulted from being hit by a ball; 19 per cent resulted from being hit 
    by a bat; and about 7 per cent resulted from colliding with another 
    player.
        Batters sustained 11 per cent of all facial injuries. Almost 98 per 
    cent of the injured batters were batting righthanded. For these right-
    handed
    
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    batters, 56 per cent of the facial injuries were to the left side of 
    the face (the side toward the pitcher); 28 per cent were to the right 
    side of the face; in the remaining 16 per cent, the location of the 
    injury on the face was unknown.
        For the youngest children, ages five through seven years old, 
    facial injuries represented a high proportion of all injuries (59 to 84 
    per cent). Facial injuries accounted for 50 per cent or more of all 
    injuries for players younger than 10 years of age.
        For five-year-olds, facial injuries were divided almost evenly 
    between organized play (53 per cent) and unorganized play (47 per 
    cent). Facial injuries in organized play predominated in all other age 
    groups, consisting of 72 to 96 per cent of all injuries.
        The Commission staff estimates that 2.1 to 3.5 million protective 
    batting helmets are in use by players in all organized youth leagues 
    during a single season. About 4 to 10 per cent of these helmets are 
    likely to have face guards. The Commission staff also estimates that 
    about 125,000 to 200,000 face guards were sold during the years 1994 
    and 1995.
        The results of the 1995 survey of injuries to children associated 
    with baseball and other information contained in the Final Report were 
    not available when the Commission requested comments on the petition in 
    1994. Therefore, the Commission now solicits comments on the petition 
    and those portions of the Final Report concerning facial injuries and 
    face guards.
        Additionally, the Commission solicits information on the following 
    topics:
         The expected useful life of face guards;
         The number and types of any injuries associated with the 
    use of face guards;
         The number of children who participated in organized and/
    or unorganized play, by age;
         Any information about the effectiveness of face guards to 
    prevent or reduce injuries; and
         Information about annual sales of face guards for the past 
    ten years, and projected sales for the next five years.
    
        Dated: July 31, 1996.
    Sadye E. Dunn,
    Secretary, Consumer Product Safety Commission.
    [FR Doc. 96-19882 Filed 8-5-96; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6355-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
08/06/1996
Department:
Consumer Product Safety Commission
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice.
Document Number:
96-19882
Dates:
Comments on the petition and the report should be received in
Pages:
40822-40823 (2 pages)
PDF File:
96-19882.pdf