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<  Safety  ~  NPR: Why Do Bike-Share Riders Skip Helmets?

PostPosted: Fri May 04, 2012 1:16 pm
User avatarSecret: wants a tall bikeJoined: Mon Aug 06, 2007 11:22 amPosts: 433Location: Lowry Hill East, not Uptown.
http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2012/05/03/151955048/why-do-bike-share-riders-skip-helmets?sc=fb&cc=fp

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If you've ever shaken your head over urban bicyclists' apparent unanimous decision to forgo helmets, you're not far off the mark.

Among users of bike-sharing programs, like Capital Bikeshare in Washington, D.C., the problem is obvious.

Flag down a few helmetless riders on those distinctive firetruck-red cruisers, as we did this week, and you're likely to encounter two kinds of people: tourists, who rented the bikes on a whim and didn't have a helmet with them; or commuters, who'll usually tell you they almost always wear a helmet, but just happen to have forgotten it today.

Of course there's a handful of people who wear helmets religiously. But a study in Boston and Washington, published this week in the Annals of Emergency Medicine, found that helmet wearers account for barely half of all bicyclists and only a tiny minority of riders of shared bikes. In both cities, 4 in 5 of those riders went helmetless.


Study author Christopher Fischer, an emergency room doctor at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, tells Shots the research is just one piece of the puzzle policymakers need to solve around bike safety. It's a question of balancing risks, such as people riding without helmets, with the rewards from people using a more healthful form of transportation.

"There's been a lot of back and forth about this," Fischer tells Shots. "Wearing a helmet is a good idea because if I'm going to fall off my bike and strike my head, I'd rather have a helmet than not." But it's not clear that the lack of a helmet should completely deter somebody from biking. "We want to increase people's ability to get exercise and do things that are environmentally sound," Fischer says.

That dilemma is one reason mandatory-helmet laws are so rare. No state requires adults to wear them, and only 21 states require them for younger riders. In Washington, D.C., they're required for anyone under 16. The argument goes that requiring a helmet doesn't increase helmet usage so much as decrease bike riding. And studies have shown that the more bikers a city has, the safer biking in that city becomes.

Josh Moskowitz, of the District of Columbia's Transportation Department, is a program manager for Capital Bikeshare. He says Bikeshare has a stellar safety record, with only about 20 reported crashes in the program's history. "Which is extraordinary, considering we've seen about 1.9 million trips," resulting in about one-fifth the accident rate in the overall biking population, he says.

Moskowitz says helmet use is just one aspect of bike safety, which also includes infrastructure improvements, such as bike lanes and trails, and awareness campaigns that educate drivers, pedestrians and bikers about safety. The bikes themselves are relatively slow, have a low center of gravity, and have lights that blink automatically. All those features make them safer than some other bikes.

Captial Bikeshare is expanding efforts to make helmets more available and more affordable. New and renewing users can now buy a Bikeshare-branded helmet for $16 through the program's website, and some Washington hotels now stock loaner helmets for guests.

But if there's one thing we learned from talking to Bikeshare riders around town, it's that cyclists can be — pardon the pun — hardheaded about their helmets. Take software developer Dave Craine, who commutes by Metro and Bikeshare a couple of days a week, riding his own bike other days.

He says he took a pretty hard fall near the Washington Monument a few weeks ago, fortunately with his helmet on. "I definitely was glad I had it then," he says. "I ride a little slower now."

Then he gets back on his Bikeshare cruise and takes off down the sidewalk — without a helmet.


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PostPosted: Fri May 04, 2012 1:20 pm
User avatarCan't stop soaping my legs in the showerJoined: Thu Jun 04, 2009 10:37 pmPosts: 2295Location: NE Mpls - Windom Park
Mods: please move to the helmet thread subforum. :wink:



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PostPosted: Fri May 04, 2012 2:22 pm
User avatarRegularly rides in ShelbyvilleJoined: Tue Jul 25, 2006 10:08 amPosts: 1260Location: Minneapolis
I can't speak for other bike share riders, but for me, I generally use Nice Ride when I run to work or run home.

When running, I really try and minimize the weight I carry for the sake of my knees and the reduction of chafing, so there's no way I'm carrying a helmet on the run.

Therefore, I have no helmet when its time for me to take the Nice Ride leg of my trip.

Oh, and also? Those things are lime green and I average about 12 mph on them. Not exactly a high risk riding situation.



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PostPosted: Mon May 07, 2012 9:12 am
User avatarHas entire BMX Bandits catalogJoined: Sat Feb 03, 2007 10:36 amPosts: 4251Location: Hopkins
We rented rideshare bikes in Denver a couple of weeks ago. Knowing we were going to do this we brought helmets along with us. One roadie actually remarked on this, complimenting us for wearing them. I saw quite a few people out on those bikes that day and not many had helmets along. Most looked like tourists (it was a Saturday with very nice weather) and I expect none of them planned in advance to go for a ride so they didn't have a helmet along.


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PostPosted: Tue May 08, 2012 12:22 am
User avatarSecret: wants a tall bikeJoined: Sun Dec 21, 2008 12:06 amPosts: 422Location: South Minneapolis - Central
If Nice Ride bikes had helmets attached to them, most riders would probably wear them. But they don't come with them. I doubt many Nice Bike riders just happen to have one with them.
Saying that, I did see a Nice Ride rider park her bike, take off her helmet, and take it with her.
Bill.


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PostPosted: Tue May 08, 2012 12:03 pm
User avatarExists in the limbo between winning and DFL in every single alleycatJoined: Mon Jun 29, 2009 5:43 pmPosts: 409Location: Capital City
Wait for it...


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PostPosted: Tue May 08, 2012 12:49 pm
User avatarPedal PusherJoined: Mon Apr 23, 2012 10:11 amPosts: 17
bc3 wrote:
If Nice Ride bikes had helmets attached to them, most riders would probably wear them. But they don't come with them. I doubt many Nice Bike riders just happen to have one with them.
Saying that, I did see a Nice Ride rider park her bike, take off her helmet, and take it with her.
Bill.


I ride normally with a helmet on my bike, but I wouldn't wear a helmet if a Nice Ride bike came with one and I was looking to rent a Nice Ride Bike. I asked a few friends who use the Nice Ride Bikes and they wouldn't wear them either if they came with them.

Why? Well, it's like wearing a used that gets passed around. How do you know the person who used the helmet before you doesn't have lice or some equally nasty scalp/hair issue? I'd skip the helmet, thanks...


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PostPosted: Tue May 08, 2012 1:08 pm
User avatarRegularly rides in ShelbyvilleJoined: Tue Jul 25, 2006 10:08 amPosts: 1260Location: Minneapolis
Tonkabiker wrote:
bc3 wrote:
If Nice Ride bikes had helmets attached to them, most riders would probably wear them. But they don't come with them. I doubt many Nice Bike riders just happen to have one with them.
Saying that, I did see a Nice Ride rider park her bike, take off her helmet, and take it with her.
Bill.


I ride normally with a helmet on my bike, but I wouldn't wear a helmet if a Nice Ride bike came with one and I was looking to rent a Nice Ride Bike. I asked a few friends who use the Nice Ride Bikes and they wouldn't wear them either if they came with them.

Why? Well, it's like wearing a used that gets passed around. How do you know the person who used the helmet before you doesn't have lice or some equally nasty scalp/hair issue? I'd skip the helmet, thanks...


Not to mention that a significant part of the appeal to the nice ride is how quick and easy it is. Toss your stuff in the basket on the front, one quick seat adjustment if there's not one at the rack that's close enough (made easier by the numbers and lines on the seat post), and go. When you're done, just run it firmly into the stand, wait a half a sec, grab your stuff and walk away.

A helmet is a whole lot more futzing around. Its not as big of a deal on my main bike as as I'm usually dealing with more load that needs to be secured, I've got to deal with the whole lock it up and unlock it routine, and my helmet is already sized, so it isn't adding much to the overall process.

And yeah, I've zero desire to wear anyone else's helmet. Similarly, if they provided Nice Ride bike shorts and chamois, I wouldn't use those either.



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PostPosted: Tue May 08, 2012 1:57 pm
User avatarRegularly rides in ShelbyvilleJoined: Tue Nov 30, 2010 1:04 pmPosts: 1205Location: Wild Wild West
phaedrus wrote:
And yeah, I've zero desire to wear anyone else's helmet. Similarly, if they provided Nice Ride bike shorts and chamois, I wouldn't use those either.


Too funny!

I used a rental bike at a resort in Florida - during a sales meeting and we had some free time. A couple bike-nuts in the group rented beach cruiser to go to town for beers and dinner. It was not a planned event. None of us had a helmet. I don't like riding without a helmet, but you don't have one with you and I would not use a rental helmet (if available). You're 'taking a risk' and you ride accordingly.

BTW - Nice Ride helmets, think about sizing... what a nightmare!



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