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onCampus--Ohio State's faculty/staff news

Vol. 38, No. 18


3-4-2009
By: Pam Frost Gorder

Biomechanics work lands Marras in NAE

Engineer’s work has protected worker health and reduced workplace injuries while optimizing high-tech production

A career devoted to preventing workplace injuries has earned William Marras the highest professional distinction accorded to an engineer.

A select group

William Marras is the 11th Ohio State engineer to become a member of the National Academy of Engineers since the NAE was founded in 1964.

The other Buckeye members:
Meyer Benzakein, chair and Wright Brothers Institute Professor in the Department of Aerospace Engineering; Jose Cruz Jr., Distinguished Professor of Engineering in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering; Liang-Shih Fan, Distinguished University Professor and C. John Easton Professor of Engineering in the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering; Robert Fenton, professor emeritus of electrical and computer engineering; W.S. Winston Ho, University Scholar Professor in the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering; Robert Kouyoumjian, professor emeritus of electrical and computer engineering; Robert Rapp, Distinguished University Professor Emeritus in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering;
Paul Shewmon, professor emeritus of materials science and engineering; Robert Wagoner, Distinguished Professor of Engineering, George Smith Chair in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering and professor of mechanical engineering; and James Williams, Honda Professor of Materials in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering.
Marras, professor and Honda Endowed Chair in the Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering at Ohio State, has been elected to the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) for “developing methods and models used to control costs and injuries associated with manual work in industry.”

“With this election, the National Academy has recognized William Marras’ seminal research in biomechanics with a specialty in back and wrist issues,” said Gregory Washington, interim dean of the College of Engineering. “We are very proud of this achievement and look forward to providing the infrastructure and support for Bill’s continued success.”

Marras’ research is critical to workers’ health as well as the industrial economy. More than four million American workers are injured every year by heavy lifting and repetitive stress on the job. Those injuries account for tens of billions of dollars in lost labor and worker compensation, and more than $100 billion in healthcare costs.

Marras has pioneered methods for studying back injury and the other musculoskeletal disorders that afflict workers.

He invented the Lumbar Motion Monitor, a device that measures the movement of the spine. With it, he has uncovered the causes of recurring back injury — including the psychological stress that influences how workers move on the job.

His research has revealed that wearing back support belts does not prevent back injury and that businesses should allow more frequent breaks for workers’ muscles to recover throughout a shift.

His interest in musculoskeletal disorders grew out of personal experience, Marras said. A basketball scholarship during his undergraduate career sparked an interest in sports injuries, and a summer job loading paint pallets on a dock inspired him to study workplace injuries.

Now he holds joint appointments in the departments of Orthopaedic Surgery, Physical Medicine and Biomedical Engineering at Ohio State. He directs the university’s Biodynamics Laboratory as well as the Institute for Ergonomics.

But perhaps his biggest achievement to date is the establishment of the Center for Occupational Health in Automobile Manufacturing (COHAM). The one-of-a-kind research center employs cutting-edge analysis methods to protect worker health, reduce worker injuries and optimize high-tech vehicle production.

COHAM is the only university-based, full-scale manufacturing operation in the world where automakers and their suppliers can test the effects of manufacturing systems on workers’ health.

As an Academy member, Marras will advise the federal government on issues of science and engineering. It’s a rare honor; of the 2 million practicing engineers in the United States, only 0.1 percent are members of the NAE.

Members are deemed by their peers to have made outstanding contributions to “engineering research, practice or education, including, where appropriate, significant contributions to the engineering literature,” and to the “pioneering of new and developing fields of technology, making major advancements in traditional fields of engineering, or developing/implementing innovative approaches to engineering education.”


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