From the article site:We need to preserve that article somehow.
The text is a pdf on my website now, bookmark it:We need to preserve that article somehow.
Thanks Flecc
An example cropped up in the 1980s after the introduction of compulsory seat belt wearing. The government's Roads Research Laboratory had been monitoring driver behaviour before and after and subsequently reported that the seat belts had brought about roughly 10% increase in driving speeds across the board.I do think there is something in the argument that some safety features can promote greater risk taking in cycling/driving due to a perceived increase in safety.
Yes, but more likely the cars just got faster. As I keep saying, there's nothing wrong with the statistics, it's just the assumptions that people make and the conclusions that they draw.The assumption was of course that drivers had felt more protected and automatically responded accordingly.
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The RRL data was shortly after the seat belt enforcement, so essentially the same car fleet and drivers.Yes, but more likely the cars just got faster. As I keep saying, there's nothing wrong with the statistics, it's just the assumptions that people make and the conclusions that they draw.
..... Is going faster not a change in behaviour?Yes, but more likely the cars just got faster. As I keep saying, there's nothing wrong with the statistics, it's just the assumptions that people make and the conclusions that they draw.
..... Common sense , why is it so rare?.When my son was 5 he was riding his bike up and down the cul de sac where we lived and he said 'Mum, I've got a great way to stop' . Before I could say a word he shoved his feet into his front wheel. Spectacular flip! Luckily his new helmet took the impact.
Fractured three vertebrae landing on my head in a riding accident when I was 15. Fortunately I had my (old style) riding hat on that day. My hat could be folded up after.
It's helmets all the way for us but I would love more bike lanes and less pot holes here in rural Lincolnshire. Or maybe drivers that used mirrors, indicators, common sense, even their eyes.......
I landed on my nose, it absorbed the impact but made a mess.I went over the handlebars when I was 12. I've still got the hole in my head from it. I went over them again a few years ago and it knocked me completely senseless. That time, the helmet took most of the impact. Whenever you go over the handlebars, you land on your head. Thankfully, it doesn't happen very often, but it can happen just by chance.
You don't need to being fast to get head injury, <5mph will do it...... Common sense , why is it so rare?.
I don't use a helmet, my wife does , and not only in the. house(joke alert). When my children were small i did insist on them wearing helmets , skulls have not fully formed in infants and small kids.
If i was riding a horse, or careening down a mountain on an MTB , or even a member of the Lycra brigade hurtling along at 30 mph, then I would wear head protection. .. but travelling at 15 mph routinely, I do not see the need. Athletes running travel faster, and they do not require helmets Cycling is not a hazardous procedure, and this should be recognised. I may fall off my bike,( i have not in years ), but the consequences are likely to be no more severe than tripping when running.
Accident and Emergency consultants are probably the least reliable sources for this. They are the group who only see all the filtered cases where those with severe injuries are selected. This is sure to colour their perceptions. In another context, .. other consultants might see doorknobs as a particular hazard.!!
Since more people are injured by trips down stairs, would it not be prudent to insist on helmets in all two story residences.?
Speed kills , height kills, kinetic energy kills but slow speed ambling either on foot or bike meets neither criteria.