dirtjunkie wrote:Adding to the culture of fear argument just fires up the proponents who jump up-and-down in protest to post on their collective message boards.
dirtjunkie wrote:The rest of us are buying our kids bicycles....and a helmet to wear.....and sharing in the fun of riding a bike.
Scotty wrote:dirtjunkie wrote:Adding to the culture of fear argument just fires up the proponents who jump up-and-down in protest to post on their collective message boards.
that then includes you.dirtjunkie wrote:The rest of us are buying our kids bicycles....and a helmet to wear.....and sharing in the fun of riding a bike.
does your did wear a helmet in the car, walking to school and on the playground?
I hope so.
dirtjunkie wrote:Scotty wrote:dirtjunkie wrote:Nope, amazingly Scooter, my kids where their seat belts in the car. No helmets. They have a blast on the playground too....sans helmets. They do wear a helmet when riding a dirt bike though. And my son wears one while on his mtn bike too. I watched him go down pretty hard in the driveway this past summer....hit his head pretty good. We brushed off the knees and palms, sucked it up and rode his bike back to the garage to go clean the gravel out of the wounds. Glad he his lid on....so was he......and could care less what YOU think that makes me.
jajones wrote:Hey Scotty,
I read this and thought it would really make your day.![]()
http://www.thejakers.com/god/bike-helmet-for-jesus
Please accept my apology in advance. I owe you one for making you read it.
Scotty wrote:jajones wrote:Hey Scotty,
I read this and thought it would really make your day.![]()
http://www.thejakers.com/god/bike-helmet-for-jesus
Please accept my apology in advance. I owe you one for making you read it.
If cycling is so dangerous, the guy would think of his family first and not ride a bike at all. Sounds like he's using his religion as justification to take unnecessary risks.
Scotty wrote:dirtjunkie wrote:Scotty wrote:dirtjunkie wrote:Nope, amazingly Scooter, my kids where their seat belts in the car. No helmets. They have a blast on the playground too....sans helmets. They do wear a helmet when riding a dirt bike though. And my son wears one while on his mtn bike too. I watched him go down pretty hard in the driveway this past summer....hit his head pretty good. We brushed off the knees and palms, sucked it up and rode his bike back to the garage to go clean the gravel out of the wounds. Glad he his lid on....so was he......and could care less what YOU think that makes me.
Please complain again about people who post in this thread. Cause that would be really funny. Like the last time you posted in this thread... after complaining about this thread....
So again advocating helmets for all TBIs including bicycling related ones make little sense there.The three most common causes of disability continued to be arthritis or rheumatism (affecting an estimated 8.6 million persons), back or spine problems (7.6 million), and heart trouble (3.0 million). http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5816a2.htm
We could look at the actual numbers about what's involved in injuring and killing people in the USA instead of making wild out of the blue speculations about why people should wear helmets. Not to minimize the seriousness of Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) related stuff but TBIs are only 1.4% of all emergency dept. visits. 0.7% of all hospitalizations and 2.1 % of all emergency dept. deaths. This includes ALL TBIs though so if all bicyclists wore helmets how much would this tiny percentage be reduced considering bicyclist injuries are a small part of all head injuries? TBI AS A PROPORTION OF ALL INJURIES: Table A, page 14 http://www.cdc.gov/traumaticbraininjury ... e_book.pdf
Interestingly it looks like you're way more likely to DIE from an auto-related TBI than a TBI from a fall but I have seen no initiatives yet to have people wear helmets while driving. Table D page 19: http://www.cdc.gov/traumaticbraininjury ... e_book.pdf
It looks like one may be much more likely to suffer a TBI as a pedestrian than a pedal-cyclist though. Yet we see no movements to have pedestrians wear helmets. Table 17, page 41: http://www.cdc.gov/traumaticbraininjury ... e_book.pdf
And what is really injuring and killing people at a much higher rate than traumatic head injury? All accidents combined do not even begin come close to the amount of deaths caused by heart disease and cancer and regular exercise may reduce the occurrence of those two main killers in the USA. I'd say that once we have deaths from heart disease and cancer to where they're roughly equal to ALL accidents then let's worry about having people on bicycles wear helmets. Let's put our resources where they will save the most amount of lives.
It looks like firearms are a much higher cause of TBI deaths than any other causes by the way (figure 1 and figure 5). Firearms are way ahead of falls and quite a bit higher than TBIs from transportion. http://www.cdc.gov/traumaticbraininjury ... ess.html#5 and Arizona (big surprise) leads the country in TBIs (figure 6). http://www.cdc.gov/traumaticbraininjury ... ess.html#5 Didn't a very well publicized one happen there just this weekend?
SpecNeon74 wrote:We could look at the actual numbers about what's involved in injuring and killing people in the USA instead of making wild out of the blue speculations about why people should wear helmets. Not to minimize the seriousness of Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) related stuff but TBIs are only 1.4% of all emergency dept. visits. 0.7% of all hospitalizations and 2.1 % of all emergency dept. deaths. This includes ALL TBIs though so if all bicyclists wore helmets how much would this tiny percentage be reduced considering bicyclist injuries are a small part of all head injuries? TBI AS A PROPORTION OF ALL INJURIES: Table A, page 14 http://www.cdc.gov/traumaticbraininjury ... e_book.pdf
How much? well the estimates are in your source: 1.7 million total TBIs of which cyclists are hospitalized 1,524 times (page 36), visit the ER 1,113 times (page 30), and die 312 times (page 41) per year. That's 2949 per year. I think the absolute numbers here are more powerful than the percentage since TBIs are caused by everything from falls to domestic violence. We're trying to keep the brains of about 3000 people intact per year.
The helmet comparison here does not apply because we have taken more practical approaches to preventing head injury in passenger cars than helmets, none of which are practical for bikes. We now have head curtain air bags, seat belts, and new for 2009 roof crush standards. You're making the analogy that if helmets are good for bikes, they should be good for cars which is silly. By the same logic, do you think seat belts and airbags should be mandated for all new bikes sold? Of course not, its not practical. My point is you reduce risk of injury in the most practical way which you point out later has worked well in cars. The better analogy is wearing a seat belt in a car is equivalent to wearing a helmet on a bike. Its easy to do and greatly reduces the risk of head injury when an accident occurs. If you don't like the seat belt analogy, how about a condom analogy? Lots of behavior involves risk. If you don't like the consequences (and who likes 3000 busted heads a year), take the proactive step of mitigating them.
jajones wrote: But, my message to the cycling subculture is to STFU already with the lid preaching and all the bombast and zealotry that goes with it. It is out of control, and the culture has literally created a Helmet Gestapo out there. You've got people in the subculture who literally wouldn't kick or scream about a child hanging upside down on a tree branch 20 feet up, but they will shat there pants if they see me riding away from the Saturday Farmer's Market in Kerrytown Ann Arbor without a helmet. It is weird and unseemly.

Your logic is flawed here. Even with air bags, seat belts and other car "safety" equipment, auto accidents are still a leader for traumatic head injuries. What would make wearing a helmet in a car any more "silly" or "impractical" than using one on a bike? You have your lids in your car, you throw them on when you turn the key and you go. They reason it seems "silly" to you is because nobody does it in our society because there hasn't been a social push even though statistics merit their use.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests