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Helmets Make Riding Safer


As summer approaches and many Americans start to dust off their bikes, blades and assorted motorized vehicles, the nation’s emergency department doctors are trying to direct public attention toward the importance of wearing safety helmets to prevent serious brain injury.

“People are riding bicycles, motorcycles and ATVs [all-terrain vehicles] more often at this time of year,” Dr. Angela Gardner, president of the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP), said in a news release. She stressed that people need to get in the habit of wearing a certified safety helmet, because it only takes one tragic crash to end a life or cause serious life-altering brain injuries.

Citing National Highway Transportation Safety Administration (NHTSA) statistics, the ACEP experts note that every year more than 300,000 children are rushed to the emergency department as a result of injuries sustained while riding a bike. Wearing a helmet that meets Consumer Product Safety Commission standards could reduce this figure by more than two-thirds, the organization suggests.

But children aren’t the only ones who need to wear helmets. In fact, older riders account for 75 percent of bicycle injury deaths, the ACEP noted. Among bicyclists of all ages, 540,000 seek emergency care each year as a result of an accident, and 67,000 of these patients suffer head injuries. About 40 percent experience head trauma so serious that hospitalization is required.

A properly fitted helmet can prevent brain injury 90 percent of the time, according to the NHTSA, and if all bicyclists between the ages of 4 and 15 wore a helmet, between 39,000 and 45,000 head injuries could be prevented each year.

With May designated as motorcycle safety month, the ACEP is also highlighting the benefits of helmet use among motorcyclists.

“Helmet use is the single most important factor in people surviving motorcycle crashes,” Gardner stated in the news release. “They reduce the risk of head, brain and facial injury among motorcyclists of all ages and crash severities.”

The ACEP cites NHTSA numbers indicating that in 2008, helmets saved the lives of more than 1,800 motorcyclists — a figure that could have risen by another 800 lives saved if all motorcyclists wore helmets. Not wearing a helmet increases the risk of dying from a motorcycle-riding head injury by about 40 percent, experts say.

Gardner and colleagues encourage people of all ages to wear helmets every time they go for a ride on a bicycle or motorcycle, but also when roller skating, rollerblading, skateboarding and/or engaging in a high-contact sport.

(Source: HealthDay News)



2 Responses

  1. This is probably the most overlooked item in ones closet.one only gets one brain and when its smashed due to lack of safety it can’t be replaced and the damage can be for life.as a wife going through traumatic brain injury recovery with my husband I can’t imagine why any sane parent would let there child on any kind of recreational riding toy without this essential protection other parts of the body when the brain gets shaken up it swells,and has no where to go. it eventually can kill the patient if not caught in time. If you love your child,husband,sister,brother DONT LET THEM RIDE WITHOUT A HELMET

  2. Perhaps bikes should be sold with helmets only, not separately. Also, there should be a registry for bikes and a warning of what can happen with riding without helmets.
    Parents are lax about the helmet issue. Perhaps, they should be shown a video of someone who got hurt because wasn’t wearing a helmet.

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