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Orlando, FLA. – At the end of the Expo Room, a crowd gathered for a demonstration at the American Society of Safety Professional 2025 Conference + Expo. The seats around a walkway were filled quickly, leaving many attendees standing to see the show.
The houses a few meters away showed personal protection equipment and other security solutions, but the catwalk quickly became the center of care.
However, the models that took place did not bring the most recent fashion of the name brands. High visibility vests, flame resistant output clothing, work gloves, eye protection and boots were put on. The women who showed the gear hooked him, putting and getting the crowd to respond, causing laughter and cheerful.
The day before, the stage of the catwalk had served as a space for a safety expert panel that emphasized the need for PPE most suitable for women in shops. The perspective calendar was invaluable, as at the end of last year, Osha promulgated a standard that required construction businessmen Provide a suitable PPE to workers.
“The real question is: The PPE is that you try and buy and use risks instead of preventing them?” The panelist asked Amy Roosa, founder of Security Security, a defense group focused on the PPE of women.

A model shows the PPE in the American Society of Safety Professional 2025 Conference + Expo on July 23, 2025 in Orlando, FLA.
Zachary Phillips/Construction DIVE
Adjusted gear can create problems, such as a Baggy vest or a glove that sticks to equipment or machinery, and often traders do not know the danger it is.
“Women do not yet know what is all available to them,” said Kelly Franko, co -founder of the Women’s Safety Manufacturers, another defense group. If women know what they need from the PPE, there is still a matter of access.
Women will not always speak out of fear of complaining stigma, said Nicole Randall, vice president of the Isea Foundation, another group that raises awareness of autumn safety.
Each panelist emphasized that the problem not only affects women, but also the workers of any size that does not fit the standard gear.
At the event, the final call of speakers urged team makers to ask their customers more questions and, in turn, for safety managers to speak. Bulk orders can save money, but often they do not adapt to size.
“If you want to say that your fall protection is unisex, better you come to me with some data,” said Roosa.
