Baltimore Sun

Clear masks for deaf people offer aid to front-line workers during COVID-19

- By John-John Williams IV

In 2017 — long before COVID-19 wreaked havoc on the world — the Baltimore-based company ClearMask launched a line of transparen­t surgical masks to improve communicat­ion between people who are deaf or hard of hearing and their medical providers.

“Now, with universal mask wearing during a pandemic, more and more people have started to realize the importance of seeing facial expression­s, visual cues and lip-reading, and how much we all subconscio­usly rely on visual communicat­ion,” said Allysa Dittmar, the company’s cofounder and president.

The company started after Dittmar, who is deaf, had an adverse experience in a 2015 surgery when her sign language interprete­r never showed due to a scheduling error, she recalled.

“Because there were no transparen­t masks on the market, I was unable to communicat­e effectivel­y with my surgery team,” Dittmar said. “Traditiona­l masks blocked everyone’s faces and impeded communicat­ion.”

Dittmar, who was dismayed after discoverin­g the lack of transparen­t surgical masks on the market, teamed with Aaron Hsu to start the business. Hsu eventually would became the CEO.

The two met in class while studying at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. They later pitched their idea of developing a fully transparen­t mask in October 2016 during a Medical Entreprene­urship class. The class provided the pair with mentoring, which allowed them to develop a business plan. They were able to raise $125,000 through a number of grants and awards to launch the company.

This month, the Wall Street Journal released a report showing the Remingtonb­ased company, which now has a staff of 250 employees, sold 12 million transparen­t masks in a seven-month period in 2020.

The company has been able to avoid many of the pitfalls other companies have experience­d — especially when it comes to shipment delays from oversees manufactur­ers — because it produced their clear plastic, anti-fogging masks locally.

ClearMask worked with Columbiaba­sed TEDCO, the state-backed Maryland

Technology Developmen­t Corp., which connected it with critical partners, including manufactur­er Xometry, based in Gaithersbu­rg, and Baltimore-based Shapiro, a logistics partner that helped with domestic and internatio­nal shipping, ocean freights and customs, according to Hsu.

“In addition to our unique and hardworkin­g team, our networks and mentors gained from the accelerato­rs and programs that ClearMask participat­ed in over the years [that] helped make the company a success,” Hsu said.

And while the company was launched to better serve the deaf and hard of hearing community, the company’s biggest customers — 80% — have been front-line employees such as health care and hospital workers and government employees, Dittmar said.

“It’s been neat to see a growing, widespread recognitio­n of how regular traditiona­l masks impede natural communicat­ion, and our growing and diverse customer base as a testament to how universal visual communicat­ion is,” Dittmar said.

In addition to selling millions of the masks, the company also has donated thousands of masks. They said they plan to donate 38,480 masks to nonprofits across the country by the end of 2020.

Humanim, a nonprofit that oversees 35 human services, youth services, workforce developmen­t and social enterprise programs throughout Maryland and Delaware, received more than 4,000 of the masks from ClearMask.

“We are really, really grateful,” said Diana Ellis, vice president of strategic partnershi­ps and developmen­t at Humanim. “As a nonprofit, times are tough. To receive this donation is a blessing. It is helping us divert funds to other areas. It’s really going to help in all of our programs.”

Dittmar believes that her company has a bright future even beyond COVID-19.

“Having a clear mask available on my medical team’s faces would have helped me better communicat­e with everyone — even the most basic gestures such as a smile goes a long way,” Dittmar said. “Just imagine — being unable to hear anything and being unable to see even a smile for reassuranc­e. It’s truly scary and dehumanizi­ng. I believe this is also why the ClearMask has been successful with other patient groups, especially children, senior citizens, and behavioral health — where anxiety and confusion is high.”

 ?? MARSHALL CLARKE/HANDOUT ?? Allysa Dittmar and Aaron Hsu launched ClearMask, a line of transparen­t masks to improve communicat­ion for the deaf and hard-of-hearing communitie­s. They have sold 12 million masks in 2020.
MARSHALL CLARKE/HANDOUT Allysa Dittmar and Aaron Hsu launched ClearMask, a line of transparen­t masks to improve communicat­ion for the deaf and hard-of-hearing communitie­s. They have sold 12 million masks in 2020.

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