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Journal Article

Citation

Voukelatos A, Rissel CE. J. Australas. Coll. Road Saf. 2010; 21(3): 50-55.

Affiliation

Health Promotion Service, Sydney South West Area Health Service, Level 9, King George V Building, Missenden Road, Camperdown NSW 2050; (avouk@email.cs.nsw.gov.au)(criss@email.cs.nsw.gov.au)

Copyright

(Copyright © 2010, Australasian College of Road Safety)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This article has been withdrawn. See:

Wall, D. and Atkinson R. JACRS 2010, 21(4): 7.
Churches, T. JACRS 2010, 21(4): 62-64.
Grzebieta, R. JACRS 2011, 22(1): 39.

Legislation for the mandatory use of bicycle helmets is a controversial issue. The analysis presented in this paper examines the ratio of cycling-related head injuries to arm injuries using hospital admissions data in New South Wales. The analysis is based on the idea that even if the numbers of cyclists has dropped over time, the relative injury rates (head versus arm) should remain unchanged unless some factor is differentially impacting on one type of injury – for example, helmet use reducing head injuries, but not affecting arm injuries. Results indicate that there was already a fall in the ratio of head to arm injuries before the mandatory helmet legislation was introduced in 1991. After the introduction of bicycle helmet legislation, there was a continued but declining reduction in the ratio of head injuries relative to arm injuries for most age groups. It is likely that factors other than the mandatory helmet legislation reduced head injuries among cyclists.

Keywords: Injury prevention, Cyclist injuries, Head injuries, Hospital data, Bicycle helmets, Legislation

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