<i>However, Dr. Henry Marsh, a neurosurgeon at St. George's Hospital in London, believes many cycling helmets are simply "too flimsy."</i><p><i>As the Telegraph reports, Marsh was speaking at the Hay Literary Festival. There, he threw caution to an erudite wind by saying: "I ride a bike and I never wear a helmet. In the countries where bike helmets are compulsory there has been no reduction in bike injuries whatsoever."</i><p>So when you break his actual argument down, it comes down to:<p>- "many are too flimsy" (what about non-flimsy helmets)?<p>- "I never ride with a helmet" (so that settles it?)<p>- "In countries where ...", citing no studies, and ignoring studies with different results.<p>Not impressed. Meanwhile I'll go with Høye's meta-analysis, unless someone can point me to (substantial) counter-arguments or critiques:<p><pre><code> doi: 10.1016/j.aap.2018.03.026. Epub 2018 Apr 17.
Bicycle helmets - To wear or not to wear? A meta-analyses of the effects of bicycle helmets on injuries
Alena Høye
Abstract
A meta-analysis has been conducted of the effects of bicycle helmets on serious head injury and other injuries among crash involved cyclists. 179 effect estimates from 55 studies from 1989-2017 are included in the meta-analysis. The use of bicycle helmets was found to reduce head injury by 48%, serious head injury by 60%, traumatic brain injury by 53%, face injury by 23%, and the total number of killed or seriously injured cyclists by 34%. Bicycle helmets were not found to have any statistically significant effect on cervical spine injury. There is no indication that the results from bicycle helmet studies are affected by a lack of control for confounding variables, time trend bias or publication bias. The results do not indicate that bicycle helmet effects are different between adult cyclists and children. Bicycle helmet effects may be somewhat larger when bicycle helmet wearing is mandatory than otherwise; however, helmet wearing rates were not found to be related to bicycle helmet effectiveness. It is also likely that bicycle helmets have larger effects among drunk cyclists than among sober cyclists, and larger effects in single bicycle crashes than in collisions with motor vehicles. In summary, the results suggest that wearing a helmet while cycling is highly recommendable, especially in situations with an increased risk of single bicycle crashes, such as on slippery or icy roads.*</code></pre>