Peyote wrote:
In Gear wrote:
A peer reviewed article from an Australian Uni (Melbourne?) suggested benefit and safety for helmets. It became a legal obligation in Oz as a result.

Fact remains - these bikes are now capable of much higher speeds than in the past. Thus the dangers of injury from any fall are increased and polystyrene lined - they may be - that polystyrene can still be a pretty effective shock absorber most of the time. Not all of the time as impact and other factors are teh real causers of KSI. But for fairly low impcat falls/collsions - Melbourne's peer reviewed study showed a clear leaning in favour of the helmet's protective effectiveness
Hence the logic of that judgement.

As the shock aborbency of quality polystyrene has been peer reviewed long since because of its effectiveness in packaging of other "fragiles"

MM wrote:
If you spend just one night in A&E - you would conclude as a PEER REVIEWED piece as recently published in BMJ would that helmets .. like any other prescribed safety measure.. . has its benefits.
MM wrote:
Peer reviewed research from Melbourne.
Given the desire to believe anything "peer reviewed" means you cycling lot have to believe it.
Hmm. This whole peer reviewed stuff seems to be a bit of a bee-in-your-bonnet. To be honest the peers involved have to know what they're talking about, and from my experience very few medical professionals understand exactly what a bicycle helmet can and can't do. Even fewer seem to care that it can cause worse injuries than it may prevent. But such is the way of the BMA and BMJ, look into the debate on cycle helmets and you'll see why I have such a low opinion of these institutionss...
I'd rather take the opinion of someone I trust, such as John Franklin, the chap who wrote Cyclecraft. Here:
http://www.cyclehelmets.org/papers/c2002.pdfhe explains the flaws in both the Australian "research" and other documents related to it. To be honest, even the flimsiest of "research" data would've been used by the helmet manufacturers to promote their products given half the chance. If they're not touching the Austarlian report then you can guarantee it's not worth the paper it's written on!
Oh well...
Ahh.. but (we or rather ) he's having a dig at all those who keep on about "peer reviewed data"

and a tendency to cherry pick the peer reviewed stuff which supports or can be taken out of contect to try to prove some point

We had it all with the jub-jub-mongliblets saga when Paul was alive

But Franklin - expert as he is - does not come into contact with the accidents that we do - day in - day out.
Helmets offer a little bit of protection and if a lawyer -or rather the lawyer acting for an insurance company in a civil County Court hearing - can argue "contributory negligence" to reduce damages for the client - they will. Now the difference in those cases depends on arugments put forth .. witness statement questionning and which version the judge "prefers" on the day.
Basically it boils down to who has the best gift of the gab on the day

As for "low opinion of medics" - a poorly run and underfunded NHS with a lottery deal on medications relfects more on the managers and government of the day than the medics employed within it. Ted happens to have peer reviewed data on his own specialism in the medical press and says he has even supersded his own previous papers as he learns more about his lurgies and potential treatments/preventions/containment of the diseases.
But back to helmets - when I see those writing the mags and Franklin hmself photographed WITHOUT wearing one in his PR photos - then

The fact they are always pictured in full gear would endorse the wearing of the head gear
If a cyclist has a small collision and does not hit his head nor see the need to pursue for damages - then the incidents would suggest routine falls which we all have from time to time... or some fault on the part of cyclist which would negate liability on part of the other person.
We see the other side . the serious cases. Most who survive a serious nasty were wearing helmets at the time.
OK - they are not the same as a mountaineers helmet - but perhaps should be made similarly to alpine sportsgear.

After all.. you go pretty fast down them hills
