“even though we had a female crash-test dummy, it wasn’t very female, if you will,” he said. “it was really based on a male data set. this has left a big hole in the safety space.”
cripton’s research team has been working to fill that data gap.
dr. peter cripton (l) with the simon robot facility at the the ubc school of biomedical engineering in vancouver.
nick procaylo
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in 2023, it conducted detailed mri scans of nine pregnant women at vancouver general hospital, examining how seatbelts fit at different stages of pregnancy. a second study, recently wrapped up, used laser scans of about 330 pregnant women at an ob-gyn clinic in surrey.
the results confirmed a common frustration: most women aren’t able to follow seatbelt positioning guidelines late in pregnancy because the abdomen forces the belt into incorrect and potentially unsafe positions.
“we know seatbelts are effective at preventing injuries, and we always recommend women wear the seatbelts when pregnant, but it’s a big challenge for contemporary seatbelts to try to restrain people in their third trimester when the abdomen is so large,” cripton said.
so far, there has been little change. the research is still in the phase of trying to build better computational models that could evaluate alternative seatbelt strategies, he added.
“it’s a very difficult problem,” said cripton, whose work contributes to international research by toyota to improve vehicle safety for pregnant occupants. “working with a car company on this gives us the best opportunity to translate these findings.”
dr. peter cripton and sophia katramadakis with the simon robot facility at the the ubc school of biomedical engineering in vancouver.
nick procaylo
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10111055a