• JAMA · Mar 1992

    Motorcycle helmet-use laws and head injury prevention.

    • D M Sosin and J J Sacks.
    • Division of Field Epidemiology, Centers for Disease Control, Atlanta, GA 30333.
    • JAMA. 1992 Mar 25; 267 (12): 1649-51.

    ObjectiveTo rebut criticism of a previous study of motorcycle helmet-use laws through reanalysis with improved measures of exposure, stratification for regional differences in crash risk, and addressing of total motorcycle-related mortality and the grounds for targeting motorcyclists for helmet-use laws.DesignDeath certificate-based correlational study of motorcycle-related deaths and motorcycle helmet-use laws.Population StudiedUnited States resident deaths from 1979 through 1986.ResultsRegardless of the denominator used (resident population, motorcycle registrations, or motorcycle crashes), states with full helmet-use laws had consistently lower head injury-associated death rates than states without such laws, even when stratified by region. Total motorcycle-related mortality, however, was similar between law groups. On a registration or crash basis, motorcyclists who died in crashes had a fivefold to sixfold higher risk of head injury than those who died using any other type of motor vehicle.ConclusionFull helmet-use laws were consistently associated with lower rates of head injury-associated death. While disagreement remains on the acceptability of the legislative approach, the scientific basis for motorcycle helmet-use laws as a head injury prevention tool appears sound.

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