The force of an improvised explosive device travels up from the ground,
through the floor of a vehicle and directly into servicemembers lower
torsos with devastating effect.
The Washington Post reports that from 2009 to 2010 this type of often
fatal injury rose from 4.8 to 9.1 percent -- 90 percent in one year
alone.
In response the U.S. military just put in a rush order for $21 million worth of "ballistic" groin protection.
Generally made oof pliable Kevlar, the gear wraps the pelvic region, protecting the femoral artery in the thigh.
Of the 142 soldiers with lower body wounds at Landstuhl Regional
Medical Center in Germany, where almost every servicemember goes after a
severe injury, 40 percent of the soldiers had wounds to the testicles.
The order will be filled by British firm Cooneen, Watts, and Stone,
Ltd who have provided over 300,000 pairs of ballistic undergarments to
English soldiers in Afghanistan.
British troops wearing ballistic underwear (UK Ministry of Defense) |