MERK said:
I was on the scene of a horrible collision where a pick-up truck rear ended a group of cyclists. Several were very badly injured, but the only two that didn`t recover had one thing in common...no helmet. One died (from head trauma) and the other suffered a life altering brain injury.
Just my experiences...
I'm assuming that these cyclists were not on a dedicated bike path, it would be nice to know in this rare case what order they were riding? It's too bad that so many cyclists die in collisions with autos, or are paralyzed from spinal cord injuries. whether they are wearing helmets or not. Same thing for pedestrians who are struck by cars (far more than cyclists) head injuries in auto accidents are rife too. I wish we had a situation like in Amsterdam where 14 million rides a day happen on bicycles but injuries seem to be few, even in comparison to pedestrians or car users. I'm asking, should everyone in every situation (that risks head injury) wear a helmet, even if the risk is slight? Kids in cars? people in automobiles, toddlers at home? I say no.
The first line of defence for the whole body is dedicated bike lanes in cities. For both pedestrians and cyclists. 100% safety will never be had, but the main goal should be to keep cars and bodies away from each other. Even if everyone had a helmet on deaths and traumatic injury would still happen. But with a bike friendly infrastructure like they have in Amsterdam we would see the numbers of injuries go way down, as happened in Holland when they implemented the program. We have a fear culture around biking here in the U.S. (and Canada) something that does not seem to exist in bike friendly cities in Europe.
Wearing a helmet from the time you wake up till the time you go to bed would possibly save a varied number of people from accidental injury of all types, but it would still suck. If its truly warranted as in competition settings then yes, of course. Like the Dutch, I don't consider riding a stretched cruiser on a dedicated bike lane to warrant the same precautions as riders competing in the "Tour De France". We can't live in constant fear of the rare danger that might happen. We also shouldn't make our kids so fearful of living that we bubble wrap them for every potential danger during the day. Danger lies everywhere, but it is not imminent, even though some people act like it is. This kind of fear sells helmets too by the way, it is used as a marketing tool. The most recent example of this is "toddler" helmets for use inside the home.
Mountain bikers often take their riding beyond the limits of what the rider and the equipment can cope with, like auto racing. Football players have helmets but even these seem to have limited value considering the long term studies of players getting early dementia. We simply need less fear and more real bike friendly cities like they have in Europe. The most recent rating of the top 20 "most bike friendly cities" in the world only had one North American city listed, and that was Montreal Canada. No U.S. cities even came close. If we want safer bike riding in America we need real change in the infrastructure. We are the richest country on the planet, there is no reason we can't ultimately reach this goal. The average biker on this site shouldn't have to ride in fear because our Govt. has been too cheap to pay for proper bike lanes. I will say it again, we need what places like Amsterdam (rated #1 bike friendly city) have, true acceptance of bikes has a form of transportation , and the infrastructure that treats them as such. Keep helmet use for high risk activities (like competition) but don't make them mandatory or obligitory for the activities of every day living, we deserve that much at least. :wink:
Dorian