Brendan Burgess
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However, it's a pity that the judge commented that he was negligent in not wearing a helmet. Unless helmets are a legal requirement for electric bikes? I presume not.
He should have at least faced a €40 fine for having no lights.I hope they pursue the cyclist for full recovery of their costs.
Cyclist should have mandatory helmets, high vis gear and insurance + "Dash/Helmet Cams
I fail to see a good argument in favour of not wearing one tbh
2) People feel that they are safer, so they take more risks. So they don't help overall.
Hi Ceist
There are loads of them.
1) One of the things I like about cycling is the freedom - wearing a helmet interferes with that.
2) People feel that they are safer, so they take more risks. So they don't help overall.
3) I like to travel as light as possible and not be carrying around unnecessary stuff. That is why I don't mind wearing them on long cycles in the mountains where the biggest risk is probably coming off the bike going downhill at speed.
The main protection for cyclists over which cyclists have control is safe cycling.
The guy in the story was reckless in that he drove without lights and crossed in front of an oncoming car. I don't think that his helmet would have helped that much. It's not clear what skull lacerations means. But his broken ankles would still have been broken.
It might have been worse had he been wearing a helmet because he might have felt safer and behaved more recklessly.
Brendan
It's certainly hard to get clear, conclusive and agreed advice from studies these days! Do you have a link to any studies which suggest that helmets are not effective Leo? Is it down to the suggestion that people become complacent when wearing them or that they simply don't do the job they were intended for?Helmet use just isn't as clear-cut as the case for seat-belt use. There are just too many contradictory studies on the effectiveness of helmets in most real-world scenarios. Evidence suggests there is no difference in outcomes between helmet wearers and non-wearers in terms of seriousness of injury. There is clear evidence that when introduced, mandatory helmet use has resulted in significant falls in the number of people cycling, particularly among children. There was a 90% fall in children cycling in NSW for example. In the NSW example and others, the fall in head injuries after the introduction of mandatory helmet use was proportionally smaller than the drop in numbers cycling.
It's certainly hard to get clear, conclusive and agreed advice from studies these days! Do you have a link to any studies which suggest that helmets are not effective Leo? Is it down to the suggestion that people become complacent when wearing them or that they simply don't do the job they were intended for?
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