Yep! All year round. And hat on. Getting a growth cut outta you kinda sharpens the focus!
Mandatory Helmet Laws & stuff (MHL discussion)
-
- Posts: 6331
- Joined: Sat Aug 30, 2014 12:06 pm
- Location: Mill Park
Re: Mandatory Helmet Laws & stuff (MHL discussion)
Postby fat and old » Wed Oct 23, 2024 6:19 am
- MichaelB
- Posts: 15443
- Joined: Tue Feb 20, 2007 9:29 am
- Location: Adelaide, South Australia
Re: Mandatory Helmet Laws & stuff (MHL discussion)
Postby MichaelB » Wed Oct 23, 2024 8:31 am
Ever heard of "reasonably practicable"Thoglette wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2024 11:24 pmDo you wear a helmet in the bath or when using a ladder?BobtheBuilder wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2024 10:28 pmI find this issue interesting because regardless of the actual individual protective effect of the helmet, there are so many other public health reasons to vigorously oppose mandatory health laws.
Do you wear hi-viz and a hat to walk from your car in the shopping centre car park to the shops themselves?
Do you wear fireproof clothes, a helmet and a HANS device every time you drive or ride in a car?
Do you slip-slop-slap every time you walk outside the house? Including into your back yard?
If not, why not?
As these have actual individual protection, why are not supported by mandatory health laws?
Along with warty, not arguing against the health benefits of getting more people riding.
Oh dear got myself sucked in again ....
- WyvernRH
- Posts: 3326
- Joined: Tue Nov 06, 2007 6:41 pm
- Location: Newcastle NSW
Re: Mandatory Helmet Laws & stuff (MHL discussion)
Postby WyvernRH » Wed Oct 23, 2024 9:44 am
I'm against MHLs on principle but ambivalent as to their necessity. Having lived through the mandatory seat belt and mandatory motorcycle helmet laws (wars?) I find people are very resistant to something that 'might' save them grief that they see as an inconvenience and only personal experience will convince them of possible necessity. Thus compulsion thru MHL and the like.
Having seen the effect of a kerbstone on an unprotected cyclist's head (way before MHL or even helmets, and back in the UK) and having survived a very similar accident here in Oz while wearing a helmet with a slight headache I'm for wearing a helmet, especially the high tech stuff available today. In the interests of honesty, I have to say that having lived to the age of 30-odd without wearing a helmet cycling in various countries I probably would not have been wearing one at the time of that accident if MHLs didn't exist and I had the utility proved to me.
PITA as they are when you just want to nip down the shops, they may be helpful. Even in our sleepy country town I've picked up a couple of kids from the side of the road over the years who have had solo accidents that left them with 'minor abrasions' <sic> to their head/face that will be with them for life which would have been minimized or prevented by a helmet (cos most kids don't wear helmets around here).
They aren't perfect, they won't save you from everything, but by golly they are better than nothing - just ask my mate who hit the kerb - Oh wait, you can't cos he isn't with us anymore...
Richard
-
- Posts: 2104
- Joined: Fri Sep 27, 2013 10:52 pm
- Location: Albury NSW on the mighty Murray River
Re: Mandatory Helmet Laws & stuff (MHL discussion)
Postby brumby33 » Wed Oct 23, 2024 11:12 am
Exactly Richard and it's a different world than it was 40 plus years ago, more traffic, more bikes, more people walking animals and more things that can go wrong. I've had my fair share of accidents as a child from Scooters and bikes and luckily I haven't hit my head because maybe I had the strength to keep my head up at the time but now, I would not be so strong at almost 65 and I don't want to become a vegetable. Even if the laws were repealed today, I'd still wear one.WyvernRH wrote: ↑Wed Oct 23, 2024 9:44 amJoking apart, helmets and PPE are designed for the environment of use. Sports field head gear bears no resemblance to the things I wore jumping out of helicopters 40 years ago or something you would wear riding a bike today. So really that article on teenagers in teen sports is not really relevant to the bike world, interesting as it is.
I'm against MHLs on principle but ambivalent as to their necessity. Having lived through the mandatory seat belt and mandatory motorcycle helmet laws (wars?) I find people are very resistant to something that 'might' save them grief that they see as an inconvenience and only personal experience will convince them of possible necessity. Thus compulsion thru MHL and the like.
Having seen the effect of a kerbstone on an unprotected cyclist's head (way before MHL or even helmets, and back in the UK) and having survived a very similar accident here in Oz while wearing a helmet with a slight headache I'm for wearing a helmet, especially the high tech stuff available today. In the interests of honesty, I have to say that having lived to the age of 30-odd without wearing a helmet cycling in various countries I probably would not have been wearing one at the time of that accident if MHLs didn't exist and I had the utility proved to me.
PITA as they are when you just want to nip down the shops, they may be helpful. Even in our sleepy country town I've picked up a couple of kids from the side of the road over the years who have had solo accidents that left them with 'minor abrasions' <sic> to their head/face that will be with them for life which would have been minimized or prevented by a helmet (cos most kids don't wear helmets around here).
They aren't perfect, they won't save you from everything, but by golly they are better than nothing - just ask my mate who hit the kerb - Oh wait, you can't cos he isn't with us anymore...
Richard
Even Youtube videos of American bicycle tourers often wear Helmets as for the distance they are travelling, there's a fair chance they are at greater risk, especially with a much heavier bicycle....but helmet laws in the USA do not exist so there must be something in this helmet thing. They really don't weigh anything, maybe make you sweat a bit more but you can always stop and take it off for a bit.
cheers
brumby33
Dave.
VWR Patagonia 2017
2003 Diamondback Sorrento Sport MTB
-
- Posts: 1137
- Joined: Sun Nov 10, 2013 8:37 am
Re: Mandatory Helmet Laws & stuff (MHL discussion)
Postby zebee » Wed Oct 23, 2024 5:29 pm
Motorcycles need a licence and people aren't renting them for a quick jaunt so having a helmet is reasonable. If you have a licence you have a lid, and the bike you are on is yours or one you are riding a lot (eg Uber Eat scooters)
But a bicycle helmet is a thing you have to carry just in case.
- bychosis
- Posts: 7404
- Joined: Sat Jan 14, 2012 1:10 pm
- Location: Lake Macquarie
Re: Mandatory Helmet Laws & stuff (MHL discussion)
Postby bychosis » Wed Oct 23, 2024 6:55 pm
I wanna be able to throw a leg over the nearest bike and roll down to the shops in my shirt and thongs without having to 'get ready' - and I do this on occasionwhen i think there is negligible risk of a $400 fine. Ill roll around a caravan park without a lid because its easier and quicker to move around and there's no traffic to worry about.
-
- Posts: 1927
- Joined: Sat Aug 28, 2010 10:21 pm
- Location: Sydney
- g-boaf
- Posts: 23219
- Joined: Mon Sep 26, 2011 6:11 pm
Re: Mandatory Helmet Laws & stuff (MHL discussion)
Postby g-boaf » Wed Oct 23, 2024 7:48 pm
-
- Posts: 1927
- Joined: Sat Aug 28, 2010 10:21 pm
- Location: Sydney
Re: Mandatory Helmet Laws & stuff (MHL discussion)
Postby am50em » Wed Oct 23, 2024 7:50 pm
- g-boaf
- Posts: 23219
- Joined: Mon Sep 26, 2011 6:11 pm
Re: Mandatory Helmet Laws & stuff (MHL discussion)
Postby g-boaf » Wed Oct 23, 2024 8:32 pm
Heck, even some harmless episodes of Derrick or Der Kommissar also get that.
- DavidS
- Posts: 3768
- Joined: Wed Sep 22, 2010 11:24 pm
- Location: Melbourne
Re: Mandatory Helmet Laws & stuff (MHL discussion)
Postby DavidS » Wed Oct 23, 2024 10:44 pm
I'm sorry but I can't let this pass.brumby33 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2024 10:06 pmIn 2024, there's umpteen times more chances to come to grief on a bicycle then it was in the mid 70's, people in cars didn't have as many distractions and were actually much better drivers and cars slower off the mark, there were no mobile phones and stuff back then, probably only am radio. There's also more cyclists around, more people walking dogs around everything today in it's multiples.....more chances of being in a bad accident....so yeah.....manadatory or not, I'll wear the skid lid!!
In the mid 70s the road toll, with a far lower population, was many multiples of what it is now. The cars didn't handle as well and their brakes were nowhere near as good. Plus, there were less cars on the roads, which meant they actually moved faster - hence the far higher road toll. I remember the campaigns, like the one in the late 70s to try and reduce Victoria's road toll below 900 per year. What is it now, maybe 300?
So, no, the roads are demonstrably safer now.
Maybe it's time for this video again:
DS
-
- Posts: 15536
- Joined: Wed Jul 25, 2012 4:40 pm
- Location: Bendigo
Re: Mandatory Helmet Laws & stuff (MHL discussion)
Postby warthog1 » Wed Oct 23, 2024 11:03 pm
I disagree that roads are safer for cyclists though.
https://bicyclenetwork.com.au/our-advoc ... ach%20year.
https://www.tac.vic.gov.au/road-safety/ ... statistics
Cycling fatalities are not in decline, but I would be surprised if cyclist numbers aren't, and yes MHLs are a reason for that.
I am very selective where and when I ride on the road and if I am to ride at peak periods it is low trafficked areas or gravel. Device distraction is endemic amongst our driving population now. I want a shoulder and I want visbility so more chance of being seen when they look up from their phone. I want to know they are coming too. Varia radar on every ride.
This is from elsewhere by a cycling journalist. I sympathise strongly with it here though;
I know multiple people who have been hit and a couple who have died as a result. I have had numerous close calls.Thanks! I need to think about how I cover road bikes and gear. The sad fact of the matter is that while I stil enjoy riding on the road, I do it far, far less than I used to – mostly because I don't exactly love the idea of not knowing for certain if I'm actually going to make it back home in one piece when I roll out of the garage. It's a huge reason – maybe the biggest reason – why gravel riding has grown so popular in the US, and one that's hard to argue with.
I am not doing it far less but I have become very selective of route and timing. I am lucky as a shift worker and where I live I can ride quiet roads in the middle of the day during the week.
- Thoglette
- Posts: 6729
- Joined: Thu Feb 19, 2009 1:01 pm
Re: Mandatory Helmet Laws & stuff (MHL discussion)
Postby Thoglette » Thu Oct 24, 2024 3:06 pm
Which is why the roadies and MTB/skatepark crowd are unable to see the key problem with MHLs as they always get “kitted up”.
If we must (for purely political reasons as they don’t work as claimed) have MHLs then let’s tie their mandate to the use of “shoes with foot retention” or something similar so that it only applies to those who’ll be “kitted up” anyway.
"People are worthy of respect, ideas are not." Peter Ellerton, UQ
-
- Posts: 455
- Joined: Sat Mar 31, 2018 12:33 am
- Location: Remote NT
Re: Mandatory Helmet Laws & stuff (MHL discussion)
Postby BobtheBuilder » Thu Oct 24, 2024 3:20 pm
And why performance cyclists (vs utility cyclists) are such a disproportionate percentage of cyclists in Australia.Thoglette wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2024 3:06 pmWhich is why the roadies and MTB/skatepark crowd are unable to see the key problem with MHLs as they always get “kitted up”.
If we must (for purely political reasons as they don’t work as claimed) have MHLs then let’s tie their mandate to the use of “shoes with foot retention” or something similar so that it only applies to those who’ll be “kitted up” anyway.
Going back to the water safety ad, most people boating offshore would wear a life jacket, mandated or not, but few (despite our level of death by drowning) wear them when having a beer by the pool or a quick dip in the ocean. Aaaand, there's good public policy reasons to mandate them offshore because they clearly, demonstrably, repeatedly, unequivocably save lives, in the same way car seatbelts and motorcycle helmets do.
-
- Posts: 15536
- Joined: Wed Jul 25, 2012 4:40 pm
- Location: Bendigo
Re: Mandatory Helmet Laws & stuff (MHL discussion)
Postby warthog1 » Thu Oct 24, 2024 4:22 pm
https://www.boataccessoriesaustralia.co ... B%20jacket.
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%.
Yep a protective comparison is a poor argument for removal of MHLs with respect bicycles, as bicycle helmets clearly, demonstrably, repeatedly, unequivocably save lives, in the same way car seatbelts and motorcycle helmets do.
Freedom of choice and different uses and types of cycling with lower speed and risk of crash and head strike is a far better argument for the removal of the laws.
-
- Posts: 455
- Joined: Sat Mar 31, 2018 12:33 am
- Location: Remote NT
Re: Mandatory Helmet Laws & stuff (MHL discussion)
Postby BobtheBuilder » Thu Oct 24, 2024 4:39 pm
Incorrect. Bicycle helmets save lives the way life jackets worn near any body of water save them. Or helmets worn to bed (people do die of head injuries from falling out of bed from time to time).
Bicycle helmets may prevent a very small amount of death, but at what larger cost? At what larger, population-level rate? Do mandatory helmet laws cause more death than they prevent? It's very likely they do. Either way, the gains are incremental, unlike seatbelts and motorbike helmets.
-
- Posts: 15536
- Joined: Wed Jul 25, 2012 4:40 pm
- Location: Bendigo
Re: Mandatory Helmet Laws & stuff (MHL discussion)
Postby warthog1 » Thu Oct 24, 2024 4:46 pm
BobtheBuilder wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2024 4:39 pmIncorrect. Bicycle helmets save lives the way life jackets worn near any body of water save them. Or helmets worn to bed (people do die of head injuries from falling out of bed from time to time).
Bicycle helmets may prevent a very small amount of death, but at what larger cost? At what larger, population-level rate? Do mandatory helmet laws cause more death than they prevent? It's very likely they do. Either way, the gains are incremental, unlike seatbelts and motorbike helmets.
What part of bicycle helmets reduce the total number of killed or seriously injured cyclists by 34% did you fail to understand?
It was a large study and compilation of results. A significant amount of evidence is the basis of the result.
I don't argue that cyclist numbers haven't been reduced and yes there is a public health consequence as a result.
Just that they do protect from injury and death. Claiming they don't is a poor, unsupported argument for the removal of the MHL.
-
- Posts: 455
- Joined: Sat Mar 31, 2018 12:33 am
- Location: Remote NT
Re: Mandatory Helmet Laws & stuff (MHL discussion)
Postby BobtheBuilder » Thu Oct 24, 2024 4:48 pm
Debate over those studies and their shortcomings have been done to death on this thread.
-
- Posts: 15536
- Joined: Wed Jul 25, 2012 4:40 pm
- Location: Bendigo
Re: Mandatory Helmet Laws & stuff (MHL discussion)
Postby warthog1 » Thu Oct 24, 2024 4:53 pm
In your eyes perhaps as you appear set on your argument that the engineers behind the design of bicycle helmets and the medical staff who advocate their use along with the statistics that verify their efficacy are wrong or false.BobtheBuilder wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2024 4:48 pmDebate over those studies and their shortcomings have been done to death on this thread.
Further I do not recall any substantive evidence of their falsehood. Some anti helmet activists have come up with some unsupported statements about the lack of helmet efficacy but that was pretty quickly revealed as the nonsense it was.
Perhaps provide it once more and we can have the discussion again.
-
- Posts: 504
- Joined: Thu Feb 08, 2024 2:28 pm
Re: Mandatory Helmet Laws & stuff (MHL discussion)
Postby CmdrBiggles » Thu Oct 24, 2024 4:57 pm
-
- Posts: 455
- Joined: Sat Mar 31, 2018 12:33 am
- Location: Remote NT
Re: Mandatory Helmet Laws & stuff (MHL discussion)
Postby BobtheBuilder » Thu Oct 24, 2024 5:16 pm
No thanks.warthog1 wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2024 4:53 pmIn your eyes perhaps as you appear set on your argument that the engineers behind the design of bicycle helmets and the medical staff who advocate their use along with the statistics that verify their efficacy are wrong or false.BobtheBuilder wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2024 4:48 pmDebate over those studies and their shortcomings have been done to death on this thread.
Further I do not recall any substantive evidence of their falsehood. Some anti helmet activists have come up with some unsupported statements about the lack of helmet efficacy but that was pretty quickly revealed as the nonsense it was.
Perhaps provide it once more and we can have the discussion again.
This falls under the "agree to disagree" principle. Let's acknowledge that and move on.
-
- Posts: 2104
- Joined: Fri Sep 27, 2013 10:52 pm
- Location: Albury NSW on the mighty Murray River
Re: Mandatory Helmet Laws & stuff (MHL discussion)
Postby brumby33 » Thu Oct 24, 2024 5:35 pm
But it does have a full time resident it seemsCmdrBiggles wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2024 4:57 pmIt's quite odd — bordering on bizarre, a 14-year old thread with hashed and rehashed debate, has taken on a Frankenstein-like life of its own — yet again!
Just stick to the known, research facts, wear a bloody helmet when cycling, and end the debate.
VWR Patagonia 2017
2003 Diamondback Sorrento Sport MTB
-
- Posts: 15536
- Joined: Wed Jul 25, 2012 4:40 pm
- Location: Bendigo
Re: Mandatory Helmet Laws & stuff (MHL discussion)
Postby warthog1 » Thu Oct 24, 2024 5:40 pm
That is the only reason I am here tbh. Correcting outright nonsense that helmets provide no, or minimal, protection in the event of headstrike.BobtheBuilder wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2024 5:16 pmNo thanks.warthog1 wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2024 4:53 pmIn your eyes perhaps as you appear set on your argument that the engineers behind the design of bicycle helmets and the medical staff who advocate their use along with the statistics that verify their efficacy are wrong or false.BobtheBuilder wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2024 4:48 pm
Debate over those studies and their shortcomings have been done to death on this thread.
Further I do not recall any substantive evidence of their falsehood. Some anti helmet activists have come up with some unsupported statements about the lack of helmet efficacy but that was pretty quickly revealed as the nonsense it was.
Perhaps provide it once more and we can have the discussion again.
This falls under the "agree to disagree" principle. Let's acknowledge that and move on.
Keep stating they are ineffective and I will keep correcting it. I don't agree to disagree as the evidence supports the fact they do provide protection from injury and death.
I however don't agree that a helmet must be worn everytime a person gets on a bike regardless of the type of cycling taking place. I do agree it is an obstacle to the greater uptake of cycling and that more cyclists is good for us all.
-
- Posts: 455
- Joined: Sat Mar 31, 2018 12:33 am
- Location: Remote NT
Re: Mandatory Helmet Laws & stuff (MHL discussion)
Postby BobtheBuilder » Thu Oct 24, 2024 6:03 pm
So why don't you concentrate on the more productive and positive contribution you could make - working out pathways to getting rid of MHLs?warthog1 wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2024 5:40 pmThat is the only reason I am here tbh. Correcting outright nonsense that helmets provide no, or minimal, protection in the event of headstrike.BobtheBuilder wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2024 5:16 pmNo thanks.warthog1 wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2024 4:53 pm
In your eyes perhaps as you appear set on your argument that the engineers behind the design of bicycle helmets and the medical staff who advocate their use along with the statistics that verify their efficacy are wrong or false.
Further I do not recall any substantive evidence of their falsehood. Some anti helmet activists have come up with some unsupported statements about the lack of helmet efficacy but that was pretty quickly revealed as the nonsense it was.
Perhaps provide it once more and we can have the discussion again.
This falls under the "agree to disagree" principle. Let's acknowledge that and move on.
Keep stating they are ineffective and I will keep correcting it. I don't agree to disagree as the evidence supports the fact they do provide protection from injury and death.
I however don't agree that a helmet must be worn everytime a person gets on a bike regardless of the type of cycling taking place. I do agree it is an obstacle to the greater uptake of cycling and that more cyclists is good for us all.
-
- Posts: 15536
- Joined: Wed Jul 25, 2012 4:40 pm
- Location: Bendigo
Re: Mandatory Helmet Laws & stuff (MHL discussion)
Postby warthog1 » Thu Oct 24, 2024 6:17 pm
I would wear one for the type of cycling I do regardless but I do not see any effective pathway.BobtheBuilder wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2024 6:03 pmSo why don't you concentrate on the more productive and positive contribution you could make - working out pathways to getting rid of MHLs?warthog1 wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2024 5:40 pmThat is the only reason I am here tbh. Correcting outright nonsense that helmets provide no, or minimal, protection in the event of headstrike.BobtheBuilder wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2024 5:16 pm
No thanks.
This falls under the "agree to disagree" principle. Let's acknowledge that and move on.
Keep stating they are ineffective and I will keep correcting it. I don't agree to disagree as the evidence supports the fact they do provide protection from injury and death.
I however don't agree that a helmet must be worn everytime a person gets on a bike regardless of the type of cycling taking place. I do agree it is an obstacle to the greater uptake of cycling and that more cyclists is good for us all.
The same goes for you. You seem more invested in their removal and I don't recall any from you.
Return to “Cycling Safety and Advocacy”
- General Australian Cycling Topics
- Info / announcements
- Buying a bike / parts
- General Cycling Discussion
- The Bike Shed
- Cycling Health
- Cycling Safety and Advocacy
- Women's Cycling
- Bike & Gear Reviews
- Cycling Trade
- Stolen Bikes
- Bicycle FAQs
- The Market Place
- Member to Member Bike and Gear Sales
- Want to Buy, Group Buy, Swap
- My Bikes or Gear Elsewhere
- Serious Biking
- Audax / Randonneuring
- Retro biking
- Commuting
- MTB
- Recumbents
- Fixed Gear/ Single Speed
- Track
- Electric Bicycles
- Cyclocross and Gravel Grinding
- Dragsters / Lowriders / Cruisers
- Children's Bikes
- Cargo Bikes and Utility Cycling
- Road Racing
- Road Biking
- Training
- Triathlon
- International and National Tours and Events
- Cycle Touring
- Touring Australia
- Touring Overseas
- Touring Bikes and Equipment
- Australia
- Western Australia
- New South Wales
- Queensland
- South Australia
- Victoria
- ACT
- Tasmania
- Northern Territory
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: brumby33
- All times are UTC+11:00
- Top
- Delete cookies
About the Australian Cycling Forums
The Australian Cycling Forums is a welcoming community where you can ask questions and talk about the type of bikes and cycling topics you like.
Bicycles Network Australia
Forum Information
Connect with BNA
This website uses affiliate links to retail platforms including ebay, amazon, proviz and ribble.