The Oklahoman

Ford's clear masks rethink safety for all

- By Phoebe Wall Howard

Ford Motor Co. has designed and created clear N95 face masks so that hearing impaired people can read lips while protecting themselves from COVID- 19, the company announced Tuesday.

A patent is pending for the new design, which is awaiting federal approval to qualify for N95 status from the National Institute for Occupation­al Safety and Health.

The low- cost, reusable respirator­s may supplement or replace the use of cloth masks that block facial expression and lips from view as mask wearers seek protection from the increased threat of new coronaviru­s variants. In addition to the hearing impaired, these masks could be used by people who depend on facial expression­s to better do their jobs, like teachers.

Face masks many people wear today are not tight. Respirator­s are airtight on the face and protect both the wearer and the people nearby. This new design by Ford filters exhalation, protecting the people around the face mask user.

Ford has also made and distribute­d cloth surgical masks.

“One of the things that's missing during the pandemic is the power of a smile,” said Jim Baumbick, Ford vice president, Enterprise Product Line Management and leader of the company's PPE ( personal protection equipment) manufactur­ing effort, in a news release.

“This clear respirator promises to improve interactio­ns between neighbors, at the store and for those who have hearing impairment­s.”

Will Brick, design prototype lead at D-Ford, the company's human-centered design studio, designed the clear mask.

“I was interested in making something that was reusable, that didn't fog somebody's glasses,” he told the Free Press. “I was looking in the mirror at the shop to see how it would fit on the face and realized I could see myself smiling.”

The goal, initially, was to design a transparen­t reusable N95 respirator for health providers — an idea inspired by discussion­s with doctors, nurses and respirator­y therapists, Brick said. “So you could share facial expression­s and bring some humanity back to our conversati­ons and encounters with people. A simple human thing like a smile has been absent so many months now.”

Brick is from a family that has worked in the auto industry for more than a century. His great-grandfathe­r, Fred Manhire, moved from working the tin mines in Cornwall, England, to working mines in the Upper

Peninsula of Michigan, known for its copper. Then he headed down to Detroit to work at the Rouge plant. He did a number of jobs that included attaching steering wheels on the Model A.

Now Brick, 41, is part of a team doing final advanced prototypin­g. Not only would these be helpful to hearing- impaired people but Ford also learned that children with autism have a harder time communicat­ing when they can't see facial expression­s.

Reusable N95 respirator­s could provide medical protection as well as ease demand for disposable masks and reduce waste, he said.

Ford plans to continue testing this winter in hopes of making the masks available in the spring. It is unclear at this time whether they will be sold or donated.

Bill Ford, executive chairman of the company, has committed to donating 100 million masks by mid-2021.

The company recently increased its commitment to 120 million.

These are medical- grade face masks primarily for at- risk communitie­s, in addition to supplies being made available at Ford dealership­s around the country.

The Ford Fund has played a key role in distributi­on.

Ford has donated 66 million surgicalst­yle face masks to date, Baumbick said Tuesday.

 ?? TODAY NETWORK] [FORD MOTOR COMPANY VIA USA ?? Martin Delonis tries on one of the new Ford clear N95 respirator masks.
TODAY NETWORK] [FORD MOTOR COMPANY VIA USA Martin Delonis tries on one of the new Ford clear N95 respirator masks.

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