"There was an immediate 46 per cent reduction in the rate of cycling fatalities per 100,000 population following the introduction of bicycle helmet legislation in Australia."
- Professor Jake Olivier
Research summary
A UNSW Sydney study has shown a clear link between mandatory helmet laws and a drastic reduction in cycling fatalities.
The evidence is in: Australian mandatory helmet laws brought in to reduce fatalities in cycling have worked, with a world-first study of such laws at UNSW Sydney, showing mandatory helmet laws led to an immediate 46 per cent drop in fatalities and have saved billions of dollars in medical costs since 1990.
Study lead author, Professor Jake Olivier of UNSW鈥檚 School of Mathematics and Statistics and Deputy Director of the Transport and Road Safety (TARS) Research Centre, says the statistics offer clear scientific evidence that mandatory helmet laws (MHL) were effective in reducing cycling injuries in Australia.
鈥淭here was an immediate 46 per cent reduction in the rate of cycling fatalities per 100,000 population following the introduction of bicycle helmet legislation in Australia,鈥 he says.
鈥淭his decline has been maintained since 1990 and we estimate 1332 fewer cycling fatalities associated with the introduction of bicycle helmet legislation to date.鈥
Australia doesn鈥檛 have national road laws as such, but after Victoria brought in mandatory helmet laws in 1990, the remaining states and territories had followed suit by 1992. This study is the first in the world to examine the effects of mandatory helmet laws applied on a national scale where those laws apply to all ages and are dutifully enforced.
The findings of the study are in stark contrast with claims made by anti-helmet advocates who believe helmets don鈥檛 reduce fatalities. Instead, they say that mandatory helmet laws (MHL) have deterred people from cycling and therefore have reduced the number of fatalities only by lowering participation rates.
The authors of the study address this by pointing to numerous international studies, including their own, that found no strong evidence for MHL leading to fewer people cycling. Emeritus Professor Raphael Grzebieta, also of TARS, didn鈥檛 mince words when discussing this 鈥渋ll-informed, small but vocal group of anti-helmet advocates who claim that the MHL has been a disaster for cycling in Australia鈥.
鈥淭his is simply not true,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hese advocates are no different to the climate change deniers and the anti-vaccination groups and belong in that same category of people that do not believe in scientific evidence. It would not matter what you present to such people. They will always live in denial.鈥
Professor Olivier concurs and says misinformation about helmet laws dissuading people from riding bikes has been present from the beginning and doesn鈥檛 expect the hard-core advocates to be moved by the research.
鈥淚t is one of those things where it has been repeated so many times that people just believe it to be true, and won鈥檛 question it because they鈥檝e heard it so often,鈥 Professor Olivier says.
鈥淭hese are the people who have made calls to repeal or weaken bicycle helmet legislation in Australia. The results from this study are not supportive of those initiatives.鈥
Professor Grzebieta takes this idea further: 鈥淚f Australian helmet laws were repealed, there would be a sudden uptake in the rate of serious head injuries and fatalities among cyclists involved in a crash. The subsequent increase in hospitalisation costs would further exacerbate the already overwhelming demand for crash trauma treatment at hospitals and cause a significant increase in health costs.鈥
Instead, both authors call for strategies to improve cycling safety, such as appropriately designed segregated bicycle infrastructure, something Professor Olivier says is sadly lacking in Australia when compared to European countries where there are often clearly designated spaces for pedestrians, cyclists and motorists. He notes that 鈥渢his senseless focus on helmet legislation detracts from the more important concerns about the construction of dedicated cycling infrastructure, education of all road users, and supportive legislation to protect cyclists, such as minimum passing distances鈥.
Professor Grzebieta agrees, saying, 鈥渋t is well known the primary reasons for not cycling in urban Australia are the lack of infrastructure and safety concerns due to interactions with motorised vehicles鈥.
Next, the authors will be looking at the health benefits of cycling when not using a helmet versus the health benefits of introducing MHL on a population rate basis.
鈥淭here are numerous claims that the benefits of cycling far outweigh the 鈥榙isbenefit鈥 of introducing mandatory helmet laws,鈥 Professor Grzebieta says. 鈥淲e are highly sceptical of this claim and suspect poor assumptions are being made in the scientific methodology.鈥