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Further coverage from Colorado Public News. CPN focuses on uncovering significant information not being reported by anyone else in Colorado.

Put A Lid On It: Helmet Use Reducing Brain Injuries On The Slopes

courtesy of Sonny Joel Flock and Kyle Hoehn

When Sonny Flock’s ski hit the edge of a hidden rock, he was thrown into the air. His body slammed onto the stone with a sharp crack.

Flock recalls that the sun was shining brightly on the back bowl that day in March 2010, at Arapahoe Basin. He and his friend Kyle Hoehn had planned for a day of big air, hitting jumps and skiing the moguls. “You know,” Hoehn suggested, “we oughta get helmets.” Flock had never worn a helmet in hundreds of outings, but that day he told Hoehn, “Yeah, yeah, it’s probably a good idea.”

When Flock tried to swerve out of the way of the snow-covered rock, the helmet turned out to be a very good idea.

By the time Hoehn managed to shake off his own skis and make the trek uphill to his unconscious friend, he rolled Flock over to find a pool of blood under his face. Flock’s injuries were so bad that a Flight For Life Colorado helicopter airlifted Flock directly from the back bowl, to St. Anthony Hospital in Lakewood.

The accident ruptured Flock’s spleen, punctured his lung, fractured his right hip and parts of his spine. It crushed the bones in his face – both eye sockets, two jaw bones, his nose and the roof of his mouth. It took more than 10 hours for surgeons to reconstruct his face. “They put 47 screws and 14 plates in my face,” Flock said.

Credit courtesy of Sonny Joel Flock
Sonny Joel Flock ended up in St. Anthony’s intensive care unit after he broke numerous bones in his face in a ski crash. His helmet saved him from permanent brain injury

When Flock left St. Anthony two and half weeks later, he had no permanent brain damage, despite a concussion. “The helmet that I was wearing was cracked,” said Flock. “It actually had just a big gash in it. It no doubt saved my life.”

The use of helmets up, and brain injuries are down on Colorado’s slopes. Yet ski-related fatalities are at a record high, with 20 deaths last year.

So far this season, several people have died on the slopes, often in poor snow conditions. One person was killed after falling on a submerged rock.

Skiers and snowboarders have taken to helmets in record numbers. The National Ski Areas Association reports that, over the past 10 years, the number has risen from 25 percent to 67 percent.

Professional ski instructor Bill Kelso, who also works at his wife Marie’s Outabounds Ski and Board in Centennial, Colo., sees Coloradans as trendsetters. He watches visitors arrive without helmets and quickly adapt to wearing one.

Last year, researchers at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine examined numerous studies of head injuries from skiing and snowboarding. The study, published in the Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery, concluded that helmets clearly reduce injury. The researchers recommended everyone wear a helmet during alpine sports.

At St. Anthony Hospital, the top-level trauma center closest to the mountains and home to a Flight For Life Colorado base, treats many of the skiers and snowboarders in the region with severe injuries. Chief of neurosurgery Dr. Stuart Levy says that St. Anthony has seen noticeably fewer patients with severe brain injuries from the slopes over the past 14 years, as helmet use has risen.

According to Levy’s research, helmets reduce the risk of a brain injury by 75 to 80 percent, and reduce the risk of death from injury by 80 percent.

The three most common causes of head injuries in downhill snow sport accidents include collisions with trees, falls from heights of 10 to 15 feet during jumps and tricks – and surprisingly simple falls to the ground, Levy said.

Anyone strapped to a pair of skis or a snowboard has eaten snow at one point or another. A tumble here or there. A topple on the bunny slopes. Levy said even a minor fall can be dangerous.

But skiers and snowboarders also are taking more risks than ever. Resorts have built terrain parks where skiers and snowboarders can perform tricks, launching themselves off half-pipes of snow, metal rails, and even picnic tables.

Levy said such falls from extreme tricks only accounted for about 5 percent of injuries 15 years ago, but are more common now. Even helmeted skiers and snowboarders are sustaining severe injuries in terrain parks.

Some have questioned whether wearing a helmet encourages people to feel a false sense of confidence, leading them to ski or snowboard recklessly.

The Johns Hopkins study refuted this, and Sonny Flock, the skier who sustained horrific injuries during his fall three years ago, rejected the notion as well.

“Maybe wearing a helmet would give you more of a false sense of confidence, but it certainly didn’t for me,” said Flock, who lives in Indiana. “I don’t want to wreck or crash or hurt myself at all.”

Colorado Public News is created in partnership with Colorado Public Television 12, Denver’s independent PBS station. It is led by editor Ann Imse. Others on the Colorado Public News team include:Cara DeGette, managing editorNoelle Leavitt, recruiting and social media directorSonya Doctorian, video journalistDrew Jaynes, webmaster and photographerJournalists Bill Scanlon, Dennis Huspeni, Jody Berger, Sara Burnett, Jerd Smith, Michele Conklin, Andy Piper, Lauren Rickel, Raj Sharan, Amanda TurnerRobert D. Tonsing, publication designer and entrepreneur
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