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55 comments
Hidden graveyard problem. Those saved from death/injury by helmets do not show up in your survey.
The risk profiles of a seatbelt vs 5 point seatbelt are completely different to the risk profiles of helmet vs no helmet.
Surely you have that back-to-front?
The hidden graveyard is full of all those who died due to physical-inactivity-related conditions due to the suppressive effect that fixation on helmets and high-viz and so on have on people's willingness to cycle and to the distraction they cause from the real sources of road danger.
(I don't really care much about what poeple do on off-road mountain-biking type activities - its a different argument, that I don't have any opinion on ).
What bollox. I wear a helmet because on the several occasions I have been knocked down it has protected my head. Of course a cycling helmet has limitations but you are far better off with one than without. I don't believe they should be mandatory. If they did become mandatory it would be because of people like you who refuse to wear them.
Yep that's right all those crazy Dutch and Danish cyclists what are they thinking ? And did you know that the A&E departments of Dutch hospitals are overwhelmed by cyclists with head injuries. ? No! Just kidding. So are ours by the way! Just kidding again.
Like a lot of the folk on here you fail to distinguish between cycling as a normal means of transport and cycling as a sport.
BTW I have 3 helmets and as a I said wear them when when it is appropriate and useful. Sportives and mountainbiking. The first where there's lots of inexperienced cyclists all grouped together or when the MTB terrain can easily have you off and out of control. ie where the 50 joules of impact protection will stop a nasty cut or graze and where that is more likely to happen.
But I don't wear one to cycle to work or for that matter when I am out jogging either. Could get a nasty bump on the head if you tripped on a pavement at 7mph. As for that Mo Farah tanking along at 13mph what a loon. He should have a helmet on if he's going that fast - Surely>? It's faster than most commuters are going on their bikes.
If wearing your helmet makes you feel better and safer then fill your boots. No-one objects. Lots of people have lucky charms.
What car?
On the whole I'd rather drivers didn't put seatbelts on, then they might drive more carefully.
Anecdotal evidence is almost the very worst kind. You'll still find people convinced that smoking does them no harm on account of someone they know has an uncle who's 95 and smokes like a chimney and never had a days illness in their life.
My anecdotes relate to a smashed helmet when I went over the handlebars whilst failing to negotiate my mountain bike down a set of concrete steps, a very dented helmet where I hit a curbstone having come off my road bike at high speed on leaves and being first aider to someone who got hit from behind by a car. Her injuries were multiple and severe but the depressed skull fracture was the one that killed her and it was right where a helmet would have covered, had she been wearing one and had it stayed on during the impact.
I get the arguments over helmet use transferring the obligation on drivers to drive carefully into an obligation on the cyclist to protect themselves from injury, and the incorrect perception that cycling must be dangerous if you have to wear a helmet. But:
1. Not all accidents are caused by a car being driven into you
2. I'd rather take some precautions and not rely totally on the skill of other road users to avoid running me over however much they are not allowed to.
3. A fall from a bicycle is not like tripping over a shoelace, you'll probably be going faster than walking pace and the entanglement of a bicycle is more likely to cause you to fall awkwardly.
If anecdotal evidence is almost the worst kind of evidence, then accepted wisdom, aka common sense, is the very worst. My common sense tells me that the set of circumstances where a helmet is likely to mitigate injury is far larger than the set of circumstances where a helmet will cause harm. In fact I know many people with damaged helmets (fnarr) and no-one who has come to harm due to wearing one. Your anecdotal evidence, perception of risk, attitude to responsibility for personal safety, set of friends and understanding of what is common sense may be different.
Having said all that I'm more than happy not to wear a helmet for pootling around the park or if I happen to just not feel like wearing it and I'd be pissed to see a mandatory requirement to wear one as I do believe that would significantly reduce the attractiveness of riding a bike to very many people.
IME helmets work. I've crashed pedal bikes (many times) & a motorbike (once), & in every case I'm sure the helmet prevented more serious injury (evidenced in several cases by deep gouges on the helmet). So I wear a helmet anywhere I'm likely to come off -- fast road, off-road & most shopping trips (really -- think kids running out of side paths). I don't see much point in a helmet when the main danger is from cars & lorries. If a ton of metal going at 35mph hits you, there is no tomorrow, helmet or no. Just my 2 penn'orth.
There's a big difference in risk of head injury between serious mountain biking and cycling Amsterdam style.
Going from one to say that helmets should be compulsory for the other is plain stupid.
The helmet well may have avoided serious injury in this case (I'd guess it probably did), but there isn't really any proof of this.
I still don't think helmets should be compulsory for mountain biking as there is a such a wide range of things put under this label, and with a wide range of head injury risk. Sure, advise it, but banning a safe activity unless you wear safety gear is counter productive.
With the mindset applied to "make cycling without a helmet illegal", I fear that one day it will be a legal requirement to wear special safety gear whenever you walk outside, or perhaps all the time.
The question is not whether you need a helmet for cycling but what sort of cycling. I live in Surrey and I go mountain biking occasionally. It's likely that I will have an off because that's the nature of MTBing. So I wear a helmet.
I also ride to work where I am not likely to have an off by sliding on some wett exposed roots. The helmet that might have helped me in a low speed bump with a tree (because that's what they are designed for) is of no use in the kind of collision that people forsee on the road.
This is also true for car drivers though. If you go an do motorsport you wear a helmet. If you are just driving to work you don't.
Most cyclist are doing less then 10mph when just travelling. I am older but an ex racer so even I am only tickling along at 14mph. Just enough to beat a marathon runner over 26 miles. For almost all cyclists on the road a helmet is an irrelevance and you might as well ask joggers to wear one as well.
Not all cycling is the same.
Total respect to the guy with camera. Did a fantastic job. Very calm.
I'd have been more worried about spinal injuries given the nature of the crash.
I see that Eagle are running with the "helmet saves life" headline......
!! Shots Fired !!
1. If I'm going to hit my head on something, I'd rather do it wearing something that has been designed to reduce the impact. Yes I realise there possible downsides to wearing a helmet (neck injuries etc) but I'd still prefer it if my head on it's own wasn't the thing making direct contact with a hard object.
2. I know that I could hit my head at any time from tripping over or a car accident, but I feel that cycling puts me in scenarios where I am more likely to hit my head if I were to fall/crash/be crashed into compared with walking etc, as the fact that I'm on a bike makes it harder to 'catch' yourself in a fall as the bike will get in the way. That's why I wear a helmet on the bike and no-where else.
3. Speed is not necesarrily a deciding factor for wearing a helmet or not - the biggest injury I had falling off a bike was in a car park at 5 mph, and was lucky not to fall onto a bollard, and I don't want to know what brain/skull injuries I would have had if my head had smashed into the top of it (I wasn't wearing a helmet at the time).
4. Whats the difference between on-road and off-road? More things to hit off-road? Not really. More likely to fall off MTBing? Maybe, but my experience of falls when off road is that you tend to know it's about to happen and have more time to react and 'control' the landing (over the bar crashes perhaps the exception regarding 'control'), where-as on road I find crashes tend to be much more sudden and far less predictable. I guess this is likely to depend on your riding style though, but maybe we could all do with learning how to crash, or rather, how to land?
5. Helmets MUST NOT be compulsary - the increase in head injuries from more people cycling will be offset massively by the improved overall health due to lower obesity levels and improved mental health.
That should be enough bait for the moment.
Irrespective of what camp you sit in with regards to wearing helmets on the roads I think you'd have to be pretty stubborn to suggest they don't help in off-road environments.
When I was young, quite a long time ago I must admit, the main off-road cycling activities were either "Rough stuff" riding off road on bikes that were not adapted for such and Cyclo Cross. For neither of those activities did we consider wearing helmets of any type but would sometimes wear a cotton cap to keep mud, rain or snow out of our eyes. Head injuries were pretty rare and I never came across such an injury in over 10 years of racing and training.
The point of my post is just to point out that off road environments are not in themselves dangerous and as such wearing a helmet is not really a simple matter of common sense. It is, just like it is on the road, a matter of personal choice that tends to be made dependant on personal belief in whether or not they are either (a) necessary and (b) effective.
hTere is no evidence the helmet payed any kind of role here, anyway this is an isloated incident and says nothing about the effectivness of helmets.
I wear one, but I don't think helmet use should be promoted as this is exactly what enemies of cycling want - to reinforce the notion that cycling is dangerous.
Superbly calm handling by the guy with the camera, taking control of the situation, don't move the body, 999, grid reference, and giving the guy a word to remember. All basic items that can completely change the outcome of situations like this.
I think everyone agrees that he did a great job. And seeing him handle the situation like that is very useful and educational. (Reminds me that I should go and do the first aid course I keep meaning to do).
I was interested in one side item as I watched it: what is the point of not letting him lose consciousness? Is it that his body will be less able to cope with the trauma, or is it to keep him in a state where he can report where he experiences pain to aid the paramedics in determining how to proceed?
Blast - double post
Ush, this used to be standard practice as it was believed that the injured individual would lapse into a coma. This is usually more of a concern 6/7 hours later if the person starts to feel drowsy. CAT scans have made the necessity of wakening a patient pretty much pointless, unless there is great concern for their well being. In fact neurosurgeons recommend rest and sleep as the best means of recovery for the body and brain. That said, I was well impressed with how calm the first aider was throughout.
Fair enough about them not being mandatory, just advised. However, you're pretty special if you don't wear one mountain biking. The argument is more poignant on the road where cyclists can be at the mercy of all kinds of external factors which decent infrastructure and training for motorists and the like can negate over the mandatory use of a helmet which might put some people off cycling.
Why? You can see from the video that they don't work at preventing concussions.
Poignant?! Mercy?! Cue the throbbing cinematic score and cut to the scene of children starving in some "foreign" country (preferably with flies and maybe some sort of black-and-white footage of a WW2 atrocity).
Meanwhile, if you think that a helmet is going to save you in the relatively rare even that a car slams into you then I have a bridge, a life-insurance policy and some snake-oil which you may be interested in.
Also, I hope you are wearing spine-protector during your death-defying commute, and that your helmet is at least a full-face downhill model?
So you believe:
2 is wrong. This doesn't need any more discussion.
1 is your personal belief. Most people that cycle in an urban environment would disagree with you.
Your spine-protector quip is also wrong. Risk profile of hedge VS stronger hedge is completely different to no hedge Vs Hedge.
Here we go.
Beat me to it, let the deluge start
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