Bike helmet laws backfiring: doctor

Here is an article from a doctor who has actually researched this topic and is able to look at the issue from a broader perspective, taking into account the damaging effects on health from discouraging cycling.

“The best evidence is that [a helmet] doesn’t make any difference to serious head injury when riding a bicycle …

initial research used to back the mandatory laws was “deeply flawed and criticised”. Some newer findings, he said, showed that these laws could increase the chance of serious injury. “On a society-wide basis, it seems as though the compulsory wearing of helmets is diminishing the number of people riding bicycles” he said. “The number one health concern is heart attacks and obesity. “Anything that can be done to decrease that would be a good thing.” 

This is a refreshing change from the scaremongering we typically get, that usually results in more people being scared of cycling.

What do you think of this post?
  • Insightful (0)
  • Interesting (0)
  • Useful (0)
  • Boring (0)

Deceptive ad portraying cycling as dangerous

The Roads & Traffic Authority of NSW has commissioned an advertising campaign to promote bicycle helmets.  As many of those campaigns are, it is deceptive, while portraying cycling as more dangerous than it really is.  Here is a short extract from the ad:

“Don’t think that little ride to the shops warrants wearing [a helmet]? Well I’ve got news for you. Even on a short ride you can have a big fall and you can suffer a MAJOR brain injury”

The underlying message is:

  1. Cycling is dangerous
  2. Wearing a polystyrene hat makes cycling ‘safe’

These misconceptions have been refuted many times, for example here.

The core message people retain from such ad is “cycling is dangerous”.  Helmet promotions like this one are known to scare people off cycling.

A bicycle activist created an amusing parody of this deceptive ad, pointing out what is missing.

HelmetFreedom has put together an analysis of this misleading ad.

HelmetFreedom has also some sample letters you can use to write to your MP.

What do you think of this post?
  • Insightful (0)
  • Interesting (0)
  • Useful (0)
  • Boring (0)

Misleading “study” from a government agency

In 2000, the Australia Safety Transport Bureau (ATSB), a government agency, released a “meta-analysis”, that claims to provide overwhelming evidence that bicycle helmets reduce the risk of brain injury.  This claim was rebutted in 2003, highlighting a lack of understanding of scientific mechanism of brain injury, failing to take into account rotational acceleration:

This examination concentrates on injury to the brain and shows that the meta-analysis and its included studies take no account of scientific knowledge of its mechanisms.  Consequently, the choice of studies for the meta-analysis and the collection, treatment and interpretation of their data lack the guidance needed to distinguish injuries caused through fracture of the skull and by angular acceleration.  It is shown that the design of helmets reflects a discredited theory of brain injury.  The conclusions are that the meta-analysis does not provide scientific evidence that such helmets reduce serious injury to the brain, and the Australian policy of compulsory wearing lacks a basis of verified efficacy against brain injury.

The ATSB did not reply to the rebuttal, thus giving up on its claim.  Despite being discredited, this “analysis” is still used by the RTA (a government agency) to defend the helmet law.

In 2011, a new meta-analysis re-assessed the meta-analysis done by the ATSB in 2000.  It reports:

This paper shows that the meta-analysis of bicycle helmet efficacy reported by Attewell, Glase, and McFadden (Accident Analysis and Prevention 2001, 345–352) was influenced by publication bias and time-trend bias that was not controlled for. As a result, the analysis reported inflated estimates of the effects of bicycle helmets“.

What do you think of this post?
  • Insightful (0)
  • Interesting (0)
  • Useful (0)
  • Boring (0)