“I think cyclists have to help themselves in terms of wearing helmets and things,” says Sir Bradley Wiggins. “I think that probably should go some way to becoming the law soon.”
Wiggins’ comments to the London Evening Standard are likely to once again ignite the eternal argument as to whether the wearing of cycle helmets should be made compulsory or not.
Last year, a Transport Research Laboratory report concluded that such legislation would “prevent head and brain injuries, especially in the most common collisions that do not involve motor vehicles, often simple falls or tumbles over the handlebars”. However, others argue that cycling levels fall once helmet use is enforced and conclude that such a measure therefore has a detrimental effect on public health in a broader sense.
This is not the first time that Wiggins has spoken on the issue. In 2012, he was at pains to emphasise that he had not been calling for helmets to be made compulsory, but merely observing that such a move might offer cyclists’ a stronger legal position in the event of a collision. Writing on Twitter, he said:
"Just to confirm I haven't called for helmets to be made the law as reports suggest. I suggested it may be the way to go to give cyclists more protection legally I [sic] involved In an accident. I wasn't on me soap box CALLING, was asked what I thought."
However, by 2013, his position appeared much firmer.
“I think certain laws for cyclists need to be passed to protect us more than anything. Making helmets compulsory on the roads, making it illegal to maybe have an iPod in while you’re riding a bike, just little things like that would make a huge difference.”
On this latest occasion, Wiggins was speaking ahead of his attempt to set a new Hour record next month. He again expressed his hope that his efforts might inspire people to cycle more themselves.
“Something like The Hour record, when you think the distance covered in that, you could cross the length and breadth of London. It maybe changes the outlook for many people of how to get about. Hopefully it will inspire a lot of people to get out there. There might be just one kid in that velodrome who is inspired to do what I do, as I was 20 years ago.
“The atmosphere in the velodrome will be incredible. It’s quite humbling to think a lot of people paid good money to come and watch you do it. If it’s anything like the Olympics was, they will help the time pass a lot quicker.”
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132 comments
Whilst Bromptoning the 2km to Waitrose along shared use path, I don't use a helmet.
Whilst Bromptoning the 2km to Waitrose along shared use path, I don't use a helmet.
Arise Sir Wiggins, with this title I confer onto you the key to the City of *untingham
I saw helmets worn is a variety of rum ways when I was in London last week. But I've not heard of anyone actually being throttled by this kind of folly.
Each to his own, most do - the few that don't, who I know, are the most experienced and safest.
I've broken 2 helmets hitting the kerbside so I do.
Just watched 'Grayson Perry House' :-
Walking around building site with no helmet (helmets required by H&S regs) & ducking under scaffold due to poor access & egress (breach of H&S regs)
Cycling slowly with brand new helmets all round (not required by any reg or law).
Bizarre broadcasting double standards.
Wiggo is incredibly foolish to make this recommendation. In answer to anyone silly enough still to believe mandatory helmets are a good idea, I have a one word response - "Australia"
Forget the TRL Jersey report - one of the worst bits of junk psuedo-science out there. TRL are the people who elsewhere reported that they could find no evidence of a benefit from helmets in the literature so would therefore assume they were 50% effective.
Look instead at the two proper academic reviews in the UK. Dr Paul Hewson found no evidence of a safety benefit for road cyclists in a study of the UK police and hospital accident statistics while Prof Sir David Spiegelhalter - a leading expert on public risk from Cambridge - writing in the Briitish Medical Journal states that the benefit is too modest to capture. These are the people we should be listening to, not the Motorised Transport Research Laboratory or a celebrity cyclist with no expertise in the field.
It'd still hurt being hit by this.
oregon-helmet-car.jpg
Yes, because it is the helmet that is causing the accident isn't it?! I think Mountain Bikers have been hurting themselves badly with and without helmets from day dot. So I'm glad you were here to clear that up.
In the first instance you've mistaken a stance against helmet compulsion anti-helmet. They're not the same thing. Many who are anti-compulsion wear helmets.
Secondly you've elected yourself as an authority and accused everyone who has argued against you as having contrived logic without revealing your own sources. So what or who are your sources? Prejudice?
On the issue of authoritative sources, in the Oct 2013 editorial of the BMJ Sir David Spiegelhalter and Dr Ben Goldacre concluded the evidence for compulsion was questionable and controversial. Of course you may want to disagree with them, but the correct way to do so would be to review the evidence and get different results. First you may want brush up on your maths, Spiegelhalter and Goldacre don't do prejudice.
That study was done in Bath, not Australia; are you sure you read it?
As for being comfortable with your choice, that might just be the result of the thirty year campaign to promote cycle helmets by massively exaggerating the risks of cycling and the protective effect of helmets. cyclehelmets.org
Yes and no. On the one hand, it would be trivially easy for police to catch cyclists not wearing helmets, particularly as police in a car are fast compared to people on bikes. On the other hand, given they don't have the resources to catch motorists who are variously speeding, jumping red lights, using their phones, etc it would be borderline impossible.
The charity Headway state 445 head injury hospital admissions per day. https://www.headway.org.uk/brain-injury-statistics.aspx
But that is from the entire population of around 65million.
Good luck with your campaign
NO a lot of us wear helmets we are just pro choice !
I will, i'm only over the hill from you. but let's not start another thread on acknowledging or saying hello to other riders we'll surely be stoned to death, we are a funny bunch!?
did you see this at Spin London recently?
http://www.hovding.com/how_hovding_works
not quite invisible, but getting there!
Maybe the vast majority of cyclist in London are wearing helmets?
So we now have to wear a helmet just in case we're assaulted by somebody ? Given your dreadful experience I assume you wear a helmet every time you leave the house now, that seams to be what your suggesting. Perhaps I've misunderstood.
Actually, the wearing of body armour, full-face helmets, protective hand wear etc. DOES facilitate engaging in an inherently highly hazardous activity. That's the whole point.
Absolutely. Perhaps the study was replicated but the one I read was carried out in Australia. Thank you for your concern.
Ooh... how very tart of you. Such cutting, incisive humour. I think I need to go lie down for a bit.
From my own very tiny survey, on my 5-mile trip to work one morning across central London 4-5 years ago, I'd say that it's true. Out of 100 people I counted on bikes, about 80 were wearing a helmet and the other 20 weren't. Not so many people on hire bikes wore helmets, but plenty still did.
I haven't done another count since, but I'd imagine the proportion of helmets worn has increased.
Among the bike commuting population in London there is a definite trend toward road bikes (from the mid-80s trend toward mountain bikes) and all the gear that goes with them, including helmets. In other words, not at all like the utility cycling trend in the Netherlands and Copenhagen, where most people wear regular clothing for cycling and little in the way of PPE.
@crikey
you make a fair point, some riders may make that mistake and 'armour up' in the belief it will prevent injury.
In response, I was a skilled rider (I rode professionally for 4 years as a freerider for Banshee Bikes and Da Kine, and then for Devinci Bikes), and knew it was a case of not "if i crash..but when I crash".
It was a case of constant risk assessment when riding stunts, I'd do everything to improve my chances of walking away if my assessment was wrong.
Good armour and a good helmet will not completely prevent a serious injury but would certainly reduce the severity of that injury
In accidents I personally experienced, it prevented a serious injury by deflecting impacts. I also cracked a number of helmets receiving a slight head ache.
I also had private accident insurance to cover me for loss of earnings and medical costs in case of a serious injury.
It's all about risk, and helmet use seems sensible when there are few disadvantages to wearing one, but that's my choice.
Loads in Greater Manchester in general.
Maybe we're all too poor oop North
You're right, I don't cycle anymore. It's too fucking dangerous - look out of your tiny bubble and you'll realise how obviously stupid it is to think something that only covers your head can possibly make it SAFE, as opposed to "less unsafe". Am I less happy? Yes. Am I fatter? Yes. But I'm alive, for what that's worth. The bloke wearing a helmet on the A40 isn't.
So there you go, great fucking promoter of exercise: I HAVE helped myself. Well done.
Don't forget to wear one in the supermarket too. You never know when you might get pushed over and hit your head. http://www.theguardian.com/uk/2009/feb/18/supermarket-row-man-killed
Exactly, and if I were participating in high risk sports cycling I would wear protection as well, but that's not the context of Wiggins statement, which is cyclists (i.e., all of us) should be wearing helmets regardless of type of cycling.
There are bigger dangers out there!!! Read "The Truth about DIHYDROGEN MONOXIDE." It's everywhere and kills thousands a year!!!!!!!
http://www.dhmo.org/truth/Dihydrogen-Monoxide.html
You probably have more chance of being killed or seriously injured in a car.
http://www.medhelp.org/general-health/articles/The-25-Most-Common-Causes...
Then I don't need a helmet, do I?
Either it's safe without or it's not safe even with. THAT is the reality outside of your precious polystyrene delusion.
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