Guilty. I used an adjective that wasn't needed.
You appear offended by that.
This is your response when I posted of people known by myself and family killed whilst cycling;
- calling the stories of the people we know personally and grieve "anecdotes" is demeaning and insensitve. I hope you didn't mean that.
Addressing;reads as a very disingenuous comment and borders on offensive. I trust it wasn't meant that way ...
There are a hell of a lot more other vehicles on the road.
Addressing;warthog1 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 18, 2022 11:24 pmhttps://www.aihw.gov.au/reports/injury/ ... ns/summary
In 2015–16, about 12,000 Australians were hospitalised for a pedal cycle-related injury representing 1 in 5 injury hospitalisations from land transport crashes.
Getting to work would be a pretty large component of land transport. Most of us have to do it.
https://www.bicyclenetwork.com.au/newsr ... way-to-go/
Released on Monday, the data on commuting habits showed that more than two thirds of people (69 per cent or 6.5 million people) drive to work.
Horrifyingly, while cars continued their dominance, riding a bike to work also declined to 1.1 per cent of all transport to work, down from 1.2 per cent in 2011.
What was that about putting words in peoples' mouths? Who is claiming wearing a helmet removes all risk?DavidS wrote: ↑Sun Oct 23, 2022 12:23 amNot to mention the bleedingly obvious - all these hospitalisations, when everyone has to wear a helmet. Citing injury numbers and claiming that riding on roads is unsafe unless you are wearing a helmet, when just about everyone riding on the roads is already wearing a helmet, just makes no sense. Do these helmet things really offer any protection - your own argument is convincing me more and more that they are utterly useless.
Nobody is claiming wearing a helmet suddenly makes riding on the roads safe. They are simply a form of risk mitigation in the case of a head strike. To reduce the chance and severity of brain injury in the case of head trauma as has been posted;warthog1 wrote: ↑Mon Oct 17, 2022 9:57 pmYes cycling can be safe. Pottering along not on the road, away from heavy, fast moving motor vehicles is probably one of those times. A blanket "cycling is safe" I strongly disagree with.
Yes I believe it should be a personal choice when and where to wear a helmet.
Sometimes it is wise, depending on the type of cycling, to put one on regardless of the law.
There are other precautions many take to avoid being hit in the first place. Lights, visible clothing, radars, route choice, ride time of day.https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29677686/A meta-analysis has been conducted of the effects of bicycle helmets on serious head injury and other injuries among crash involved cyclists. 179 effect estimates from 55 studies from 1989-2017 are included in the meta-analysis. The use of bicycle helmets was found to reduce head injury by 48%, serious head injury by 60%, traumatic brain injury by 53%, face injury by 23%, and the total number of killed or seriously injured cyclists by 34%. Bicycle helmets were not found to have any statistically significant effect on cervical spine injury.
Not bad for ameaningless talisman
I do not disagree with that at all.
Mandating helmet use places the burden of taking action to address safety onto those being hit. As posted;
There are enough reasons to address helmet laws without making unsupported claims.warthog1 wrote: ↑Mon Oct 17, 2022 10:49 pmDo you believe they were put in place to quell unsafe motorist behaviour?
I'd have said more likely they were an attempt to be seen to address or mitigate the risk posed by motorists.
Make the victims change rather than the perpetrators.
Far easier to do that than make any serious attempt to address the dangerous behaviour.