Section 8: Safety Considerations
8.1 Track Safety Features
- Curve walls are profiled with smooth ice surfaces to guide sleds and reduce the risk of ejection. Overflow lips at the top of walls act as containment barriers.
- Crash padding (deformable material) is installed at particularly dangerous curves and transition zones.
- Speed-monitoring sensors are placed throughout the track. If speeds exceed safe thresholds, the race director may modify start positions or add artificial chicanes.
- Track inspections are conducted before every training and competition session by the track chief and marshals.
8.2 Athlete Safety Requirements
- Full-face visor helmet mandatory during all training and competition runs.
- Athletes must complete a minimum number of training runs on the specific track before competing (typically 3–6 runs).
- Novice athletes must progress through the FIL licensing system, starting on lower-speed tracks before advancing to Olympic-calibre venues.
- Annual medical examination is mandatory for all FIL-licensed athletes.
- Athletes experiencing dizziness, concussion symptoms, or impaired motor function are immediately withdrawn from competition pending medical clearance.
8.3 Medical and Emergency Provisions
A medical team is stationed at the finish area at all times during training and competition. Additional medical spotters are positioned at high-risk sections of the track. Ambulance access must be available within 3 minutes to any point on the track. In the event of a crash, track marshals immediately signal to halt subsequent starts and clear the scene before competition resumes.
8.4 Environmental Conditions
Ambient temperature, wind speed, humidity, and ice surface temperature are continuously monitored. If conditions deteriorate to the point where athlete safety is compromised (excessive wind, ice deterioration, poor visibility), the race director may delay, suspend, or cancel runs. All environmental readings are logged and made available to teams.