ASTM STP 1341-2000 PDF
Name in English:
St ASTM STP 1341-2000
Name in Russian:
Ст ASTM STP 1341-2000
Original standard ASTM STP 1341-2000 in PDF full version. Additional info + preview on request
Full title and description
Safety in Ice Hockey: Third Volume — ASTM STP 1341 (STP 1341-2000). A collected-volume of technical papers and research presented to and compiled by ASTM Committee F08 (Sports Equipment and Facilities), Subcommittee F08.15 (Hockey), edited by Alan B. Ashare and published by ASTM International in 2000. The volume assembles research, test results, standards comparisons and practical guidance addressing equipment performance, injury surveillance, protective devices, emergency care and liability issues in ice hockey.
Abstract
This ASTM Special Technical Publication (STP 1341) collects peer-reviewed papers and technical reports on the safety of ice hockey, with emphasis on injury epidemiology, equipment performance and certification, helmet and face-protection design and testing, spinal and head injury prevention and care, rule infractions and behavioral contributors to injury, and legal/liability issues. The work is intended as a reference for researchers, equipment designers, clinicians, standards developers and sport governing bodies involved in reducing injury risk in ice hockey.
General information
- Status: Published STP (proceedings volume; reference/technical literature).
- Publication date: 2000.
- Publisher: ASTM International (formerly American Society for Testing and Materials), West Conshohocken, PA.
- ICS / categories: 97.220 (Sports equipment and facilities) — winter sports equipment; related to 13.340 (Head protective equipment).
- Edition / version: STP (volume) 1341 — 2000 edition (edited volume).
- Number of pages: 313 pages (illustrated, collected papers).
Scope
This volume addresses multidisciplinary topics that affect safety in ice hockey: methods and results from injury surveillance and longitudinal studies; principles and methods for injury research and data collection; test methods and certification practices for helmets, face masks and other protective equipment; international comparisons of helmet and protective-equipment standards; case studies on severe injuries (including spinal injury care and transport); ergonomics and design considerations for head and facial protection; behavioral and rule-enforcement studies (penalties, aggression) and legal/liability issues affecting manufacturers and organizers. The scope is scholarly and practical — it provides both research findings and discussion relevant to standards, product testing, and on-ice safety policy.
Key topics and requirements
- Injury surveillance methodologies and results from longitudinal and cross-sectional studies (youth, amateur, collegiate levels).
- Principles of ice hockey injury research and recommended data-collection systems.
- Performance, design and certification issues for helmets, face masks and headgear; test methods used to evaluate impact attenuation and penetration resistance.
- Comparison and critique of international helmet and face-protection standards and certification programs.
- Clinical care and on-rink transport procedures for suspected spinal and head injuries.
- Analyses of penalties, aggressive behavior, and their relationships to injury risk.
- Legal and liability considerations for equipment manufacturers, rinks and leagues.
Typical use and users
Used as a reference and background compendium by: sports medicine researchers and clinicians; biomechanics and protective-equipment designers; standards developers and certification bodies; helmet and face-guard test laboratories; athletic trainers, team physicians and emergency medical personnel; ice-rink managers and league safety officers; policy-makers and legal professionals dealing with sports liability. Also useful to graduate students and academics studying sports injury prevention and equipment performance.
Related standards
Relevant normative documents and programs referenced by readers and practitioners include the ISO 10256 series (Protective equipment for use in ice hockey — general and part-specific requirements), ASTM specifications for sport eye protectors (ASTM F803), national certification programs such as the Hockey Equipment Certification Council (HECC) for helmets/facemasks, and other ASTM STP volumes and proceedings on hockey safety (earlier and later STP volumes in the "Safety in Ice Hockey" series). These resources are commonly used together with the research compiled in STP 1341 for product design, testing, and regulatory/compliance decisions.
Keywords
ice hockey; safety; helmet; face mask; protective equipment; injury surveillance; concussion; spinal injury; equipment certification; ASTM STP 1341; Alan B. Ashare; sports medicine; standards comparison; HECC; ISO 10256; ASTM F803.
FAQ
Q: What is this standard?
A: STP 1341 is not a single consensus "standard" in the sense of a specification to be certified against; it is ASTM Special Technical Publication 1341 (2000), a collected volume of technical papers on safety in ice hockey edited by Alan B. Ashare and published by ASTM International.
Q: What does it cover?
A: The volume covers injury research and surveillance, equipment performance and certification topics (helmets, face protection), comparisons of international standards, emergency care for spinal/head injuries, behavioral analyses related to injury risk, and legal/liability issues. It brings together empirical studies, test method descriptions and applied recommendations relevant to reducing injury in ice hockey.
Q: Who typically uses it?
A: Researchers, sports medicine professionals, equipment designers, standards developers and certification bodies, helmet test laboratories, athletic trainers, team physicians, rink operators, and league safety officers — anyone needing a research-backed reference on ice-hockey safety and equipment issues.
Q: Is it current or superseded?
A: STP 1341 is a published proceedings volume from 2000. Its research and discussions remain a historical and technical reference, but many equipment standards, certification protocols and test methods have evolved since 2000. Users should consult the latest editions of relevant standards and certification programs (for example the ISO 10256 series, current ASTM specifications and HECC/other certification updates) for up-to-date performance requirements.
Q: Is it part of a series?
A: Yes — it is part of the ASTM "Safety in Ice Hockey" collected volumes (ASTM STP series). Other related STP volumes (earlier and later) cover similar topics and provide updated research; practitioners often consult multiple volumes in the series alongside current normative standards.
Q: What are the key keywords?
A: ice hockey, helmet, face mask, protective equipment, injury surveillance, concussion, spinal injury, equipment certification, safety, ASTM STP 1341, standards comparison.