On Apr 10, 1:40 pm, sms88 <
scharf.ste...@geemail.com> wrote:
> On 4/10/2012 8:57 AM,
dustoyev...@mac.com wrote:
>
> > The Volvo was a totalled-out mess but the cabin was mostly intact
> > after impact, as was the driver<g>. The perception is that US
> > automakers have done a lot of catching up in regard to "safety" in
> > general and in particular, to minimizing passenger cabin intrusion
> > when the really bad stuff comes down.
>
> The problem with a personal story is that you really have no way of
> knowing what would have happened in a different vehicle.
Amen, brother.
> Except you
> probably can get a reasonable idea by evaluating the characteristics of
> the vehicle versus other vehicles since there is a large body of
> evidence when it comes to different makes and models of vehicles and a)
> how they fare in crash test simulations, b) how the occupants fare in
> actual crashes, and c) (though less useful) the relative number of
> injuries and fatalities for each make and model of vehicle.
>
> It's very similar with the whole helmet "debate" if you can even dignify
> it by calling it a debate anymore since
Since some of the "debaters" dragged the whole thing into the mud? For
instance, by accusing those who disagree of "lying", being
"prejudiced" to the point of blind stupidity, or worse?
> the evidence that supports the
> efficacy of helmets is so overwhelming. When You look at a collection
> of statistics with a large enough sample size for the margin of error to
> be reasonable, you shake your head in bewilderment and sadness that
> there are people in the world that seem to make it their mission to lie
> about helmets.
There you go again, dragging the discussion down to what can only be
described as "your level".
> Those of us that have studied the helmet issue for many years, and that
> did so without first determining what they wanted the conclusion to be,
Everyone has prejudices.
> all realized,
Whoa, let's have a great big citation on that claim-- "all"? I hardly
think so!
>from actual data collected in a statistically sound
> method, that bicycle helmets provide a a significant amount of
> protection in head-impact crashes. Those that were anti-helmet to begin
> with, took another approach, they searched for junk science and
> statistics that supported their bias, and if they couldn't find any they
> simply made them up.
SMS is really going to town, here.
> The only agreement seems to be that the likelihood of being involved in
> a head impact crash on a bicycle is sufficiently low that helmet usage
> is not going to have a large impact on the injury and fatality
> statistics.
Oh my God, the representation of "the doctor told me I (my wife, my
cousin, my CHILDREN would be dead except they wore that smashed helmet
which clearly proves everything I'm blabbering about" testimony is
rampant in these discussions)
> Yet for those that are involved in such a crash, the
> effectiveness of helmets has been proven to be significant.
No, it hasn't. You obviously wish to the skies that it had been, but
it hasn't.
(OK, backing up a little here and I hope to God my little white lights
go on when I put it in reverse-- For The Children For If Only One Is
Saved):
Well, let's just say, for purposes of discussion here, that at the
time and "in the current market" of my anecdote, my friends could have
saved at least repair bill money and probably bought a "nicer", newer
car for what they paid for that Volvo, but that "other" automobile,
again based on time and price, might well not have measured up to the
Volvo's performance.
Credit and "debits" where due; I appreciate the comments on
contemporary safety, although I stand by my comments IRT Volvo;
again, offered as a personal and anecdotal reference, "we" ourselves
once bought a vehicle new, and paid the full freight for doing so
compared to used or perhaps a "program car" (those can be very good
deals, economically), compared to the model-year earlier examples of
"the same thing", which were quite similar except for the addition of
several "cabin air bags" in the new vehicle.
And that was totally "for the children", namely our own two, one of
whom was not long out of a "car seat".
Well, I won't say it was money wasted even though we never "used"
those air bags. My "pavement rash" bicycling comments apply in a broad
sense to my careful driving of motor vehicles-- it's best to avoid
crashes in the first place.
OK, back in D (what, no lights or siren?) and back to bikes:
I've quoted a well-known study done by a helmet proponent here in
Austin, Texas, that showed helmet use having absolutely no salutary
effects in regard to reducing head injuries in bicycle accidents.
Since the "proponent" was Dr. Pat Crocker, prominent Austin physician:
quoting from:
<
http://www.seton.net/about_seton/news/2009/05/05/
governor_appoints_dr_pat_crocker_to_the_texas_medical_board>
Dr. Crocker is an Emergency Medicine specialist with Emergency Service
Partners, P.A. He is also an assistant clinical professor of emergency
medicine for the University of Texas Medical Branch, a member of the
Seton Family of Hospitals Board of Trustees, Take Heart Austin
Steering Committee, and is a fellow of the American College of
Emergency Physicians. Crocker is also a member of the Travis County
Medical Society and Texas Medical Association, and chair of the Austin/
Travis County EMS Quality Assurance Board. He served in the U.S. Army,
and received a bachelor's degree and master's degree in nutrition from
the University of California at Berkley, and a doctorate of osteopathy
from the University of Health Sciences College of Osteopathic Medicine
and Surgery. (end quote)
Crocker is also Director of the Emergency Dept. at the "new" Dell
Children's Hospital, and when the results of the first year of what
must be called a "set-up" study of bicycle-related head injury, a
second year was instituted (at what cost to hospital users and public
is unknown) which also failed to provide the expected results, which
were to be used, if past history of MHL's in Austin, Texas were any
indication, in re-establishing a MHL or at least bolstering
enforcement of the "under 16" law still on the books after the "all
user" MHL was revoked, some years before in some shame and
embarrassment, Dr. Crocker was forced to admit publicly that indeed,
bicycle helmets were not indicated to be of any use in reducing head
injury, and further, that the main associated and possibly "causative
factor" found was RWI, especially relating to alcohol abuse. And
there, praise the Lord above, went the political ammunition for the
good and well politically connected doctor to realize his apparent
dream of making everyone on a bicycle in Austin, Texas wear a helmet.
The "under 16" mandate, to the best of my knowledge, is still on the
books but again, is seldom enforced. And there's another can of worms
for the helmeteers to defend, "selective enforcement" based on "race",
and neighborhood ("socio-economic status related to "who can fight
back").
Gosh, Dr. Crocker-- what was that about "rotational brain injury"
relating to head impacts that we might find in the literature, again?
Skull not broken, brain still injured after little Suzy or little
Johnny fell off their bicycle? Hello???
I've gone around the mulberry bush with you on this exact matter
before. You may-- or may refrain from-- demonstrating your own
prejudices by trying to attack that well-funded and most professional
study on the grounds of sample size-- oh look, no surprise, you've
already done so in your post quoted above. Gosh, talk about a leopard
not changing his spots-- to use a complimentary metaphor from the
animal kingdom. You're welcome, SMS.
What the hell, that's what ignorant near-sighted knee-jerk reactions
according to know-it-all prejudices are all about. Carry on!
Wear the damn thing if you believe, or don't believe. Don't get run
over by a motor vehicle or slam your head into the pavement in the
first place, is the best advice.
--D-y