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#81
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New Bontager Helmet Material
On Mon, 25 Mar 2019 18:00:29 -0700 (PDT), jbeattie
wrote: On Monday, March 25, 2019 at 4:21:03 PM UTC-7, John B. Slocomb wrote: On Mon, 25 Mar 2019 06:51:29 -0700 (PDT), jbeattie wrote: On Monday, March 25, 2019 at 3:46:45 AM UTC-7, John B. Slocomb wrote: On Sun, 24 Mar 2019 20:46:10 -0700 (PDT), Frank Krygowski wrote: On Sunday, March 24, 2019 at 10:16:27 PM UTC-4, jbeattie wrote: On Sunday, March 24, 2019 at 6:34:19 PM UTC-7, Frank Krygowski wrote: On 3/24/2019 8:09 PM, sms wrote: On 3/23/2019 4:09 PM, John B Slocomb wrote: snip I've always thought the the way to handle safety was through insurance. Just note in every policy the statement that "this policy shall be null and void should the proper safety clothing/equipment not be in use at the time of an injury". That leaves the decision of whether or not to wear a helmet up to the user. Some states now allow motorcyclists to not wear a helmet if they provide proof of a specific amount of coverage of health insurance. The thought is that the government doesn't want to have to cover the cost of medical care for indigent people that fail to take proper safety precautions. The same could be applied to cyclists, at least in countries without nationalized health care. Since all the research concludes that bicycle helmets greatly reduce head injuries in accidents involving head impact... That's false. this would be a compromise that most cyclists could get behind. Or perhaps just offer a discount to those individuals that agree to wear a helmet while cycling, just as there are discounts for having certain kinds of safety equipment in a motor vehicle. Would your "discount" on health insurance apply to pedestrians and motorists who wear helmets, given that pedestrian and motorist head injuries cost the insurance companies and/or the health care system FAR more than the tiny number of bike-related injuries? This is the fundamental weirdness of the helmet mania. It's applied to bicyclists, who comprise a tiny portion of the brain injury problem. It's the result of a carefully crafted meme started by Bell Sports and a few other people. It's accepted by millions of people who haven't the brains to look for data. SMS is but one example. There is plenty of proof that helmets reduce the effects of head strikes. OK, there is plenty of proof that helmets reduce scratches, abrasions, minor bumps etc. But helmets are never promoted on that basis. Instead, they are promoted by 1) implying that riding a bike is very likely to cause serious or fatal brain injury, and 2) claiming or implying that bike helmets tremendously reduce the likelihood of such injury. And again, both of those ideas are false. The fact that walkers don't wear helmets is meaningless. Why? Pedestrians suffer far, far more serious or fatal brain injuries than bicyclists, so their "cost to society" is far more - and "cost to society" (or as SMS showed, "cost to insurance agencies or national health care systems") is one of the arguments persistently given for promoting or mandating bike helmets. Maybe thirty years ago Bell apparently made a push to promote groups that promoted helmets -- and certainly Trek has a profit motive, but I'm not seeing Big Helmet at work here. I notice you switched from past tense to present tense. I think if there is (present tense) no current "Big Helmet" effort to push the helmet meme, it's only because their (past tense) efforts were so successful. We now have a society that thinks riding a bike is dangerous in a general sense, and a major source of serious brain injuries. There is plenty of good old fashioned scientific research proving from a biomechanical standpoint that bike helmets help prevent certain injuries, and MIPS and newer designs are better at reducing concussions. First: "Certain" injuries, yes, and "old fashioned research," yes. But if you look at concussions or TBI fatalities among all bicyclists (not just those in small scale hospital studies) you don't see the help that is claimed. And again, helmets are promoted and sold based on prevention of concussion and worse TBI. Since helmets became widely accepted, what's happened to bike-related concussions? They've risen dramatically, not fallen. What's happened to bike- related fatalities? They've fallen, but not as much as pedestrian fatalities - and most of the reductions have probably been caused by better medical techniques. IOW, better ER work saved pedestrian lives. That same improved ER work plus bike helmets somehow seems to have saved _fewer_ lives. No helmet can eliminate concussions even in minor accidents since a person can get a concussion without even hitting his head (i.e whiplash). But golly gee, why wasn't that what was said when mandatory helmet laws were pushed in countless states and cities? Why wasn't that and ISN'T that part of every helmet promotion blurb in flyers, on the internet, in books and magazine articles and radio and TV spots? Instead, all those sources typically use the following trick: They give an anecdote about a bike crash that resulted in a concussion or worse, then imply that a helmet would have prevented it. A common example is the news reporting of a cyclist death: "The bicyclist was riding south in the northbound lane at 2 AM when he was hit head-on by the tractor trailer. The cyclist was not wearing a helmet." And manufacturers are not claiming that helmets are cure-alls, having learned from lawsuits not to over-promote or make unsustainable health claims. Of course they're not claiming helmets are cure-alls! Instead, they put stickers inside the helmet saying, essentially, "This thing isn't nearly as good as others led you to believe." But they are certainly glad that the others are still pushing the helmeteer meme. If you ride a lot and in traffic -- car or bike traffic -- wearing a helmet is a perfectly reasonable choice. The less you know about this issue, the more reasonable that choice seems. - Frank Krygowski In 1994 there were 796 bicycle deaths in the U.S. In 2016 there were 835, in 1994 some 19 of the deaths were while wearing a helmet while in 2016 137 of the deaths were while wearing a helmet. In percentages there were some 4% more deaths in 2016 than in 1994, but, some 700% more died while wearing a helmet. This seems rather strange if helmets really do save lives. Another illustration of incomplete numbers telling us nothing. We don't even have the gross number of cyclists to come up with an injury rate. By one local metric, the number of cyclists in Portland increased almost seven-fold between 1994-2014. I'm not going to bother looking up the national number. -- Jay Beattie. I see.... the fact that of a specific number of deaths where a certain percent were wearing helmets compared with a 4% larger number of deaths in which a much larger number, some 700% larger, number of those who died were wearing helmets is not significant? Your 7 fold increase in number of cyclists does indicate that considering the small increase in the number of deaths many, many, cyclists are riding more safely. But it doesn't explain why, if helmets make you safe, of a the slightly larger number of deaths far more, some 700% more, were wearing helmets. Another fact that might be considered is that some 45,000 were injured in 2011 and 682 died while 45,000 were injured in 2015 and 818 died. -- Yes, its meaningless unless you know the number of total cyclists and the change in percentage wearing helmets and cause of death. For example, if ridership increased seven-fold or simply doubled nationally, then the death rate actually dropped dramatically, although the gross number of deaths is up. Increased voluntary use of helmets will show more people killed with helmets, and without knowing the cause of death, no conclusions can be drawn about the effectiveness vel non of helmets. In 1970, I'm sure more people were shot while wearing bell-bottoms than in 2016. The number of cyclists is largely immaterial. After all from 1980 until 2017 bicycle deaths ranged from 965 per annum in 1980 to 777 in 2017 with a high of 965 in 1980 to a low of 623 in 2010 and we know that the numbers of riders increased and/or decreased from year to year during that period. But of the 796 that died in 1994, 19 were wearing helmets, about 2% while in 2016 some 835 died, an increase in deaths of ~4% while the number of fatalities wearing a helmet was 721% higher. Now, we know that there was probably an increase in the number of cyclists from 1994 until 2016 but the number of fatalities increased only 4%while the numbers of fatalities who were wearing a helmet increased by a factor or more then 700% Regardless on the number of riders deaths only increased by 4% while deaths while wearing a helmet increased by more than 700%. If total deaths are related to numbers of cyclists then logic would indicate that there were an increase of about 4% while you tell me that there was a 7 fold increase. So, as the total number of deaths did not increase significantly the only answer in the 700% increase in helmeted deaths must have been because a large number of the fatalities would have died regardless of whether they were wearing a helmet, or not. So wearing a helmet will save your life? BTW, gross numbers of crashes are up in Portland since 1994, but like I said, the number of cyclists increased almost seven-fold, so the injury rate is down. The likelihood that you will get injured, however, isn't based on averages unless you ride an average amount, in an average place in average weather at an average speed with average car/bike/pedestrian/skateboard/walkers with twelve dogs/eScooters traffic. -- Jay Beattie. -- Cheers, John B. |
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#82
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New Bontager Helmet Material
On 3/25/2019 8:07 PM, John B. Slocomb wrote:
On Mon, 25 Mar 2019 14:57:37 -0700, sms wrote: On 3/25/2019 6:51 AM, jbeattie wrote: On Monday, March 25, 2019 at 3:46:45 AM UTC-7, John B. Slocomb wrote: snip In 1994 there were 796 bicycle deaths in the U.S. In 2016 there were 835, in 1994 some 19 of the deaths were while wearing a helmet while in 2016 137 of the deaths were while wearing a helmet. In percentages there were some 4% more deaths in 2016 than in 1994, but, some 700% more died while wearing a helmet. This seems rather strange if helmets really do save lives. Another illustration of incomplete numbers telling us nothing. If they didn't use incomplete data then those opposed to the use of helmets would have no data to use at all. We don't even have the gross number of cyclists to come up with an injury rate. By one local metric, the number of cyclists in Portland increased almost seven-fold between 1994-2014. I'm not going to bother looking up the national number. No, you are required to look up all those numbers and present the underlying studies. I've tries a number of times to determine the actual number of people in the U.S. that ride a bicycle and I find numbers which include everyone that has ridden a bicycle once in the past year and a many more numbers that appear to be nothing more than a wild guess. I also note that if the number of riders is "estimated" by an bicycle advocacy groups they are ,surprisingly, larger. The League of American Wheelmen seems to say that there are 57 million bicyclists in the U.S. while U.S. Census Bureau says that in the period some 786,000 rode a bike to work. Now, it is obvious that many ride a bike as a recreation while a lesser number are riding as a matter of basic transportation but can the factor be 71 times greater (assuming that none of the transportation riders ever ride for recreation). I believe a factor of 71 is not impossible. I look at our local bike club as an example. It's not a huge club, perhaps a couple hundred members. But AFAIK, there are fewer than ten members who have ever used a bike for regular commuting. There are probably only a few more who routinely use a bike for other utility work, like shopping. For most members, a bike is a recreation toy, nothing more. My bike commuting was (locally) unusual enough that I've twice been the subject of nearly full page articles, with big photos, in our metro area newspaper. I've also been interviewed on TV about bike commuting, once in this metro area and another time in the state where I used to live and work. -- - Frank Krygowski |
#83
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New Bontager Helmet Material
On 3/25/2019 9:48 PM, James wrote:
On 26/3/19 12:00 pm, jbeattie wrote: On Monday, March 25, 2019 at 4:21:03 PM UTC-7, John B. Slocomb wrote: Another fact that might be considered isÂ* that some 45,000 were injured in 2011 and 682 died while 45,000 were injured in 2015 and 818 died. -- Yes, its meaningless unless you know the number of total cyclists and the change in percentage wearing helmets and cause of death.Â* For example, if ridership increased seven-fold or simply doubled nationally, then the death rate actually dropped dramatically, although the gross number of deaths is up.Â* Increased voluntary use of helmets will show more people killed with helmets, and without knowing the cause of death, no conclusions can be drawn about the effectiveness vel non of helmets. In 1970, I'm sure more people were shot while wearing bell-bottoms than in 2016. BTW, gross numbers of crashes are up in Portland since 1994, but like I said, the number of cyclists increased almost seven-fold, so the injury rate is down.Â* The likelihood that you will get injured, however, isn't based on averages unless you ride an average amount, in an average place in average weather at an average speed with average car/bike/pedestrian/skateboard/walkers with twelve dogs/eScooters traffic. Indeed. In Australia, the National Participation Survey that has been conducted every 2 years from 2011, found in the 2017 survey that "15.5% of the Australian population had ridden in the previous week".Â* About 80% cycled for recreation, and 30% for transport.Â* Note that some ride both for transport and recreation. Also "While bicycle ownership has remained steady in comparison to the 2011 National Cycling Participation Survey, there has been a statistically significant decrease in the level of cycling participation in Australia between 2011 and 2017." So if 30% of 15.5% of the population rode for transport in the last week, that would be about 4.65% of the population riding for transport. Â*I assume this means riding to school and the shops as well as riding to work, because I believe census data shows a lower percentage (~2%) ride to work. Population has increased from 22.6 million in 2011 to 24.7 million in 2017. With the relatively small increase in population countered by the small decrease in participation, the actual change in the number of people cycling is fairly small.Â* A couple hundred thousand more riders at most, in a few million total. Yet fatalities have remained very stable at about 40 per year, while serious injuries have increased dramatically, almost 100% over the last decade. It is difficult to make sense of the reasons.Â* We are slowly getting more restricted speed limits, so crash outcomes may be less life threatening.Â* There are certain city areas where the number of people riding has increased, and there may be fewer riding in areas where fatalities are more likely (high speed roads).Â* Maybe there are more non-fatal collisions because slower distracted city drivers are making more mistakes. Regardless, 9 times as many pedestrians are killed each year in Australia, and hospital ER data shows they are most likely to arrive at the ER with a head injury - if they survive that long.Â* Fewer pedestrians make it to the ER than cyclists because I assume they are more likely dead than just alive, and because cycling injuries are generally far less serious. None of the road safety experts call for pedestrian helmets though. It's true that pedestrian fatalities and serious TBI cases greatly outnumber those of cyclists. Thus the cost to society of those pedestrian injuries is much higher. It's also true that, on average, bicycling is repeatedly found to be safer than pedestrian travel in terms of fatalities per mile. Yes, there's always uncertainty in the amount of bicycling being done, and the uncertainty varies by nation. (Some nations are much more serious than others about tracking bicycle use.) But the estimates I've seen for the U.S., Britain, Australia and other nations all rank cyclists as safer per mile traveled than pedestrians. Yet the carefully constructed myth persists that cycling is SO DANGEROUS that one should never do it without flimsy head protection. And high visibility clothing. And even daytime lights. Furthermore, the most vocal promoters of the myths are avid cyclists. It's just weird. Read this article for an account of the abuse received by a former editor of _Bicycling_ magazine when he decided to stop wearing a helmet: https://cyclingtips.com/2018/11/comm...a-bike-helmet/ -- - Frank Krygowski |
#84
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New Bontager Helmet Material
On 3/25/2019 5:55 PM, sms wrote:
On 3/25/2019 3:46 AM, John B. Slocomb wrote: snip In 1994 there were 796 bicycle deaths in the U.S. In 2016 there were 835, in 1994 some 19 of the deaths were while wearing a helmet while in 2016 137 of the deaths were while wearing a helmet. In percentages there were some 4% more deaths in 2016 than in 1994, but, some 700% more died while wearing a helmet. This seems rather strange if helmets really do save lives. It should only seem strange to you if you believe that the sole reason for those deaths is the lack of a helmet. This is like the people that used to claim that cycling rates declined when an MHL was introduced, then they backtracked and admitted that cycling rates went up, but at a slower rate than population growth, and insisted that the MHL was the reason. More Scharf bull****, re-writing the story to fit his own position. The discussion was about the effect of Australia's mandatory helmet laws on bicycle ridership. There was a step change, a decrease of more than 30%, precisely when the laws were enacted. The decreases were noted by, among other things, automatic bike counters. The reason was confirmed by, among other things, telephone polls of people's attitudes toward cycling. (The only data source that did not show a decrease was one counting station that happened to have a bike rally pass through it - but MHL fans seized that example as "proof" that there was no decrease.) Afterward Oz's population did increase quite a lot. Eventually, the raw number of cyclists did rise somewhat, as would be expected. But the RATE of bicycling per person did NOT rise. The rate has never recovered to pre-MHL levels. Scharf apparently does not understand the meaning of the word "rate." Of course cycling rates vary for a multitude of reasons--weather, economic changes, demographic changes, and the availability of transit alternatives. None of those account for a large _step_ decrease at precisely the time a MHL was enacted. -- - Frank Krygowski |
#85
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New Bontager Helmet Material
On Monday, March 25, 2019 at 7:13:34 PM UTC-7, John B. Slocomb wrote:
On Mon, 25 Mar 2019 18:00:29 -0700 (PDT), jbeattie wrote: On Monday, March 25, 2019 at 4:21:03 PM UTC-7, John B. Slocomb wrote: On Mon, 25 Mar 2019 06:51:29 -0700 (PDT), jbeattie wrote: On Monday, March 25, 2019 at 3:46:45 AM UTC-7, John B. Slocomb wrote: On Sun, 24 Mar 2019 20:46:10 -0700 (PDT), Frank Krygowski wrote: On Sunday, March 24, 2019 at 10:16:27 PM UTC-4, jbeattie wrote: On Sunday, March 24, 2019 at 6:34:19 PM UTC-7, Frank Krygowski wrote: On 3/24/2019 8:09 PM, sms wrote: On 3/23/2019 4:09 PM, John B Slocomb wrote: snip I've always thought the the way to handle safety was through insurance. Just note in every policy the statement that "this policy shall be null and void should the proper safety clothing/equipment not be in use at the time of an injury". That leaves the decision of whether or not to wear a helmet up to the user. Some states now allow motorcyclists to not wear a helmet if they provide proof of a specific amount of coverage of health insurance. The thought is that the government doesn't want to have to cover the cost of medical care for indigent people that fail to take proper safety precautions. The same could be applied to cyclists, at least in countries without nationalized health care. Since all the research concludes that bicycle helmets greatly reduce head injuries in accidents involving head impact... That's false. this would be a compromise that most cyclists could get behind. Or perhaps just offer a discount to those individuals that agree to wear a helmet while cycling, just as there are discounts for having certain kinds of safety equipment in a motor vehicle. Would your "discount" on health insurance apply to pedestrians and motorists who wear helmets, given that pedestrian and motorist head injuries cost the insurance companies and/or the health care system FAR more than the tiny number of bike-related injuries? This is the fundamental weirdness of the helmet mania. It's applied to bicyclists, who comprise a tiny portion of the brain injury problem. It's the result of a carefully crafted meme started by Bell Sports and a few other people. It's accepted by millions of people who haven't the brains to look for data. SMS is but one example. There is plenty of proof that helmets reduce the effects of head strikes. OK, there is plenty of proof that helmets reduce scratches, abrasions, minor bumps etc. But helmets are never promoted on that basis. Instead, they are promoted by 1) implying that riding a bike is very likely to cause serious or fatal brain injury, and 2) claiming or implying that bike helmets tremendously reduce the likelihood of such injury. And again, both of those ideas are false. The fact that walkers don't wear helmets is meaningless. Why? Pedestrians suffer far, far more serious or fatal brain injuries than bicyclists, so their "cost to society" is far more - and "cost to society" (or as SMS showed, "cost to insurance agencies or national health care systems") is one of the arguments persistently given for promoting or mandating bike helmets. Maybe thirty years ago Bell apparently made a push to promote groups that promoted helmets -- and certainly Trek has a profit motive, but I'm not seeing Big Helmet at work here. I notice you switched from past tense to present tense. I think if there is (present tense) no current "Big Helmet" effort to push the helmet meme, it's only because their (past tense) efforts were so successful. We now have a society that thinks riding a bike is dangerous in a general sense, and a major source of serious brain injuries. There is plenty of good old fashioned scientific research proving from a biomechanical standpoint that bike helmets help prevent certain injuries, and MIPS and newer designs are better at reducing concussions. First: "Certain" injuries, yes, and "old fashioned research," yes. But if you look at concussions or TBI fatalities among all bicyclists (not just those in small scale hospital studies) you don't see the help that is claimed. And again, helmets are promoted and sold based on prevention of concussion and worse TBI. Since helmets became widely accepted, what's happened to bike-related concussions? They've risen dramatically, not fallen. What's happened to bike- related fatalities? They've fallen, but not as much as pedestrian fatalities - and most of the reductions have probably been caused by better medical techniques. IOW, better ER work saved pedestrian lives. That same improved ER work plus bike helmets somehow seems to have saved _fewer_ lives. No helmet can eliminate concussions even in minor accidents since a person can get a concussion without even hitting his head (i.e whiplash). But golly gee, why wasn't that what was said when mandatory helmet laws were pushed in countless states and cities? Why wasn't that and ISN'T that part of every helmet promotion blurb in flyers, on the internet, in books and magazine articles and radio and TV spots? Instead, all those sources typically use the following trick: They give an anecdote about a bike crash that resulted in a concussion or worse, then imply that a helmet would have prevented it. A common example is the news reporting of a cyclist death: "The bicyclist was riding south in the northbound lane at 2 AM when he was hit head-on by the tractor trailer. The cyclist was not wearing a helmet." And manufacturers are not claiming that helmets are cure-alls, having learned from lawsuits not to over-promote or make unsustainable health claims. Of course they're not claiming helmets are cure-alls! Instead, they put stickers inside the helmet saying, essentially, "This thing isn't nearly as good as others led you to believe." But they are certainly glad that the others are still pushing the helmeteer meme. If you ride a lot and in traffic -- car or bike traffic -- wearing a helmet is a perfectly reasonable choice. The less you know about this issue, the more reasonable that choice seems. - Frank Krygowski In 1994 there were 796 bicycle deaths in the U.S. In 2016 there were 835, in 1994 some 19 of the deaths were while wearing a helmet while in 2016 137 of the deaths were while wearing a helmet. In percentages there were some 4% more deaths in 2016 than in 1994, but, some 700% more died while wearing a helmet. This seems rather strange if helmets really do save lives. Another illustration of incomplete numbers telling us nothing. We don't even have the gross number of cyclists to come up with an injury rate. By one local metric, the number of cyclists in Portland increased almost seven-fold between 1994-2014. I'm not going to bother looking up the national number. -- Jay Beattie. I see.... the fact that of a specific number of deaths where a certain percent were wearing helmets compared with a 4% larger number of deaths in which a much larger number, some 700% larger, number of those who died were wearing helmets is not significant? Your 7 fold increase in number of cyclists does indicate that considering the small increase in the number of deaths many, many, cyclists are riding more safely. But it doesn't explain why, if helmets make you safe, of a the slightly larger number of deaths far more, some 700% more, were wearing helmets. Another fact that might be considered is that some 45,000 were injured in 2011 and 682 died while 45,000 were injured in 2015 and 818 died. -- Yes, its meaningless unless you know the number of total cyclists and the change in percentage wearing helmets and cause of death. For example, if ridership increased seven-fold or simply doubled nationally, then the death rate actually dropped dramatically, although the gross number of deaths is up. Increased voluntary use of helmets will show more people killed with helmets, and without knowing the cause of death, no conclusions can be drawn about the effectiveness vel non of helmets. In 1970, I'm sure more people were shot while wearing bell-bottoms than in 2016. The number of cyclists is largely immaterial. After all from 1980 until 2017 bicycle deaths ranged from 965 per annum in 1980 to 777 in 2017 with a high of 965 in 1980 to a low of 623 in 2010 and we know that the numbers of riders increased and/or decreased from year to year during that period. But of the 796 that died in 1994, 19 were wearing helmets, about 2% while in 2016 some 835 died, an increase in deaths of ~4% while the number of fatalities wearing a helmet was 721% higher. Now, we know that there was probably an increase in the number of cyclists from 1994 until 2016 but the number of fatalities increased only 4%while the numbers of fatalities who were wearing a helmet increased by a factor or more then 700% Regardless on the number of riders deaths only increased by 4% while deaths while wearing a helmet increased by more than 700%. If total deaths are related to numbers of cyclists then logic would indicate that there were an increase of about 4% while you tell me that there was a 7 fold increase. So, as the total number of deaths did not increase significantly the only answer in the 700% increase in helmeted deaths must have been because a large number of the fatalities would have died regardless of whether they were wearing a helmet, or not. So wearing a helmet will save your life? The gross number of deaths involving people in helmets will necessarily trend up as more people wear helmets. You can also say that the number of deaths of people with iPhones sky-rocketed between 1994 and 2014 -- or death of people with tattoos. You can't draw any conclusions from your numbers. Many bicycle deaths do not involve head injury, or head injury is not the cause of death or the impact is so catastrophic that the helmet is meaningless.. Without knowing the cause of death or the total number of cyclists, you can claim that helmets saved thousands. You can claim anything you want, really. It's like an algebra equation with all variables. BTW, Portland keeps lots of statistics about bikes. https://www.portlandoregon.gov/trans...article/545858 Go to .pdf page 41. Bridge traffic -- which is a pretty good metric for bicyclists coming into downtown -- has increased from '95 to 2014 over six-fold. Gross number of crashes are up, crash rate is down. Helmet use up from 67% to 80%. That doesn't speak to injury rate, although most crashes involve some injury. This has bicycle deaths -- five in 2016, two were smushed by DUII drivers. https://www.portlandoregon.gov/trans...article/594747 As for the effect of helmets in my cohort, see http://media.oregonlive.com/commutin...bike-study.pdf "Thirteen percent (6) of commuters who did not wear a helmet experienced a serious traumatic event, compared with 5% (43) of those who did (p 0.023). In an additional analysis comparing commuters who reported a traumatic event with those who reported a serious traumatic event, lack of helmet use was the only statistical difference between the two groups (p 0.013)" I wear a helmet because I ride practically every day, many days in rain or inclement weather with lots of other cyclists and cars -- including the dopiest woman I've ever met who kept cutting me off. Very odd. I wanted to smack her. She had rain pants, this big rain jacket and even a rain cover on her back pack -- but no f****** fenders! Her back was this giant mud stripe. I mean really, if you're going to spend all that money for covers, get some fenders. Anyway, I digress. It's really easy to lose traction. No skin off my teeth to wear a helmet. -- Jay Beattie. |
#86
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New Bontager Helmet Material
On Thu, 21 Mar 2019 01:44:32 -0700, Sir Ridesalot wrote:
Then there is this site that I came across just recently. After reading it, it seems that helmets don't meet many expectations. Full URL because many here don't like Tiny URLS. https://www.forbes.com/sites/tanyamo...-ever-bicycle- helmet-ratings-released-only-four-earn-5-stars/#4f36b4ee44e6 Usual industry FUD to sell their expensive product to the gulible. None of the bicycle helmets I've ever purchased over the deades had an touch on the MSR helmet that I first purchased. The real circus has been watching the machnations over "the standards" over here as the industry tried to carve out a exclusive market for themselves. |
#87
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New Bontager Helmet Material
On Mon, 25 Mar 2019 22:19:28 -0400, Frank Krygowski
wrote: On 3/25/2019 8:07 PM, John B. Slocomb wrote: On Mon, 25 Mar 2019 14:57:37 -0700, sms wrote: On 3/25/2019 6:51 AM, jbeattie wrote: On Monday, March 25, 2019 at 3:46:45 AM UTC-7, John B. Slocomb wrote: snip In 1994 there were 796 bicycle deaths in the U.S. In 2016 there were 835, in 1994 some 19 of the deaths were while wearing a helmet while in 2016 137 of the deaths were while wearing a helmet. In percentages there were some 4% more deaths in 2016 than in 1994, but, some 700% more died while wearing a helmet. This seems rather strange if helmets really do save lives. Another illustration of incomplete numbers telling us nothing. If they didn't use incomplete data then those opposed to the use of helmets would have no data to use at all. We don't even have the gross number of cyclists to come up with an injury rate. By one local metric, the number of cyclists in Portland increased almost seven-fold between 1994-2014. I'm not going to bother looking up the national number. No, you are required to look up all those numbers and present the underlying studies. I've tries a number of times to determine the actual number of people in the U.S. that ride a bicycle and I find numbers which include everyone that has ridden a bicycle once in the past year and a many more numbers that appear to be nothing more than a wild guess. I also note that if the number of riders is "estimated" by an bicycle advocacy groups they are ,surprisingly, larger. The League of American Wheelmen seems to say that there are 57 million bicyclists in the U.S. while U.S. Census Bureau says that in the period some 786,000 rode a bike to work. Now, it is obvious that many ride a bike as a recreation while a lesser number are riding as a matter of basic transportation but can the factor be 71 times greater (assuming that none of the transportation riders ever ride for recreation). I believe a factor of 71 is not impossible. I look at our local bike club as an example. It's not a huge club, perhaps a couple hundred members. But AFAIK, there are fewer than ten members who have ever used a bike for regular commuting. There are probably only a few more who routinely use a bike for other utility work, like shopping. For most members, a bike is a recreation toy, nothing more. My bike commuting was (locally) unusual enough that I've twice been the subject of nearly full page articles, with big photos, in our metro area newspaper. I've also been interviewed on TV about bike commuting, once in this metro area and another time in the state where I used to live and work. Over here we do still have quite a number of people that ride a bicycle to do the shopping generally in the local area. Quite noticeable in Bangkok where it is flat and less notable in cities "up-country" that may be a bit hilly. I asked a Senor Sergeant of the Thai Police who lives in the next house about bicycle deaths and he said something to the effect that they are very few and I got the idea that the police may not pay much attention to them as compared to the auto and motorcycle deaths they seem negligible. I haven't seen actual statistics but one article stated that of all road deaths 3% were bicycles. Given that small motorcycles and autos amount to some 86% and pedestrians some 8% bicyclists are the most unlikely to die on the roads of a country that is second in the world (per capita) in road deaths. -- Cheers, John B. |
#88
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New Bontager Helmet Material
On Mon, 25 Mar 2019 20:12:02 -0500, AMuzi wrote:
On 3/25/2019 7:38 PM, John B. Slocomb wrote: On Mon, 25 Mar 2019 14:51:39 -0700, sms wrote: On 3/25/2019 3:01 AM, John B. Slocomb wrote: snip But strangely no one seems to be particularly upset about the 37,133 highway deaths (2017) or at least I see nothing in the news that says so. You must have missed the mandates for airbags, safety glass, padded dashboards, collapsible steering columns, back-up cameras, seat belts, TPMS, etc. None of these will prevent 100% of deaths or injuries. But each one has some effect, and don't add much cost to a vehicle once in high volume production. Yes, and now that we all have air bags it is discovered that the airbags kill people :-) As for not adding to the cost of the car.... I once tried to cost a sedan without safety belts, no radio, manual shift and hand wind up windows. I found that none of the dealers in Bangkok could quote on such a thing and that while they could be special ordered it had to be for a number of vehicles. Something that a taxi company might do. I did find that 10 units without any modern refinements was substantially cheaper then 10 units with "as usually sold" equipment. I know less than nothing about Thai law. In USA you can drive without all the mandated crap in any vehicle manufactured 1967 or earlier. Easy choice for me. In Thailand the only requirement is a safety inspection annually for vehicles five years, or more, old which includes brakes and shock absorbers. There is no requirement for air bags, safety belts and such Falderal. The inspection costs 200 baht (about $6) and does include an emissions check. I might comment that my 15 year old diesel pickup has never failed an emissions check :-) -- Cheers, John B. |
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New Bontager Helmet Material
On 3/25/2019 11:00 PM, jbeattie wrote:
Many bicycle deaths do not involve head injury, or head injury is not the cause of death or the impact is so catastrophic that the helmet is meaningless. Don't tell that to the rabid helmet promoters. They'll call you a heretic. -- - Frank Krygowski |
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New Bontager Helmet Material
On 3/25/2019 11:56 PM, John B. Slocomb wrote:
On Mon, 25 Mar 2019 22:19:28 -0400, Frank Krygowski wrote: On 3/25/2019 8:07 PM, John B. Slocomb wrote: On Mon, 25 Mar 2019 14:57:37 -0700, sms wrote: On 3/25/2019 6:51 AM, jbeattie wrote: On Monday, March 25, 2019 at 3:46:45 AM UTC-7, John B. Slocomb wrote: snip In 1994 there were 796 bicycle deaths in the U.S. In 2016 there were 835, in 1994 some 19 of the deaths were while wearing a helmet while in 2016 137 of the deaths were while wearing a helmet. In percentages there were some 4% more deaths in 2016 than in 1994, but, some 700% more died while wearing a helmet. This seems rather strange if helmets really do save lives. Another illustration of incomplete numbers telling us nothing. If they didn't use incomplete data then those opposed to the use of helmets would have no data to use at all. We don't even have the gross number of cyclists to come up with an injury rate. By one local metric, the number of cyclists in Portland increased almost seven-fold between 1994-2014. I'm not going to bother looking up the national number. No, you are required to look up all those numbers and present the underlying studies. I've tries a number of times to determine the actual number of people in the U.S. that ride a bicycle and I find numbers which include everyone that has ridden a bicycle once in the past year and a many more numbers that appear to be nothing more than a wild guess. I also note that if the number of riders is "estimated" by an bicycle advocacy groups they are ,surprisingly, larger. The League of American Wheelmen seems to say that there are 57 million bicyclists in the U.S. while U.S. Census Bureau says that in the period some 786,000 rode a bike to work. Now, it is obvious that many ride a bike as a recreation while a lesser number are riding as a matter of basic transportation but can the factor be 71 times greater (assuming that none of the transportation riders ever ride for recreation). I believe a factor of 71 is not impossible. I look at our local bike club as an example. It's not a huge club, perhaps a couple hundred members. But AFAIK, there are fewer than ten members who have ever used a bike for regular commuting. There are probably only a few more who routinely use a bike for other utility work, like shopping. For most members, a bike is a recreation toy, nothing more. My bike commuting was (locally) unusual enough that I've twice been the subject of nearly full page articles, with big photos, in our metro area newspaper. I've also been interviewed on TV about bike commuting, once in this metro area and another time in the state where I used to live and work. Over here we do still have quite a number of people that ride a bicycle to do the shopping generally in the local area. Quite noticeable in Bangkok where it is flat and less notable in cities "up-country" that may be a bit hilly. I asked a Senor Sergeant of the Thai Police who lives in the next house about bicycle deaths and he said something to the effect that they are very few and I got the idea that the police may not pay much attention to them as compared to the auto and motorcycle deaths they seem negligible. I haven't seen actual statistics but one article stated that of all road deaths 3% were bicycles. Given that small motorcycles and autos amount to some 86% and pedestrians some 8% bicyclists are the most unlikely to die on the roads of a country that is second in the world (per capita) in road deaths. IIRC, in the U.S. bike deaths are about 2% of total road deaths. That doesn't stop the hand wringers. They sob that since bikers are about 1% of road users, we are at terrible, terrible risk. We must wear foam hats, ride only in garish-colored clothing, use bright lights day or night, ride only in special lanes that are "protected" (AKA hidden) by parked cars, etc. Sorry for estimating percentages. -- - Frank Krygowski |
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