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Original Articles

Helmet Use and Risk Compensation in Motorcycle Accidents

Pages 71-81 | Received 26 Aug 2010, Accepted 04 Oct 2010, Published online: 22 Jan 2011
 

Abstract

Objective: The “risk compensation” hypothesis suggests that individuals offset perceived gains in safety by increasing their risk-taking behavior to maintain a stable or “homeostatic” level of risk. If this is true for motorcyclists, then helmet use, which reduces the risk of brain injury and death, may lead helmet users to take more risks when they ride. Thus, increased risk-taking by helmet users should show up as overrepresentation in crashes, and accident reconstruction should reveal risky behaviors in the seconds just before the crash. This article examines data from two separate studies involving the on-scene, in-depth investigation and reconstruction of motorcycle crashes: 900 in Los Angeles (1976–1977) and another 1082 in Thailand (1999–2000).

Methods: Each crash was investigated on scene within minutes of its occurrence by teams of specially trained researchers and later reconstructed in order to identify precrash and crash events, verify helmet use/nonuse, etc. “Exposure” data on helmet use and other readily visible factors were also collected for the population-at-risk by observing riders who passed by each accident scene some time after a crash that had been investigated by the team. In this article, helmeted and unhelmeted accident-involved riders are compared to each other as well as to the population-at-risk.

Results: In Thailand, helmeted riders did not differ significantly from unhelmeted riders in alcohol use, precrash speed, being the primary or sole cause of the crash, or unsafe speed or lane positioning for the traffic conditions; they were no more likely to be in a single-vehicle accident, to crash by running off the road, or to lose control. In Los Angeles, drinking riders were half as likely to wear a helmet as nondrinkers. However, when drinkers and nondrinkers were segregated, helmeted riders were no more likely to cause their crash, run stop signs or red lights, commit other traffic code violations, or run off the road. They did not differ in speed or single-vehicle crash rates. In both studies, helmeted riders were underrepresented in crashes compared to helmet use in the population-at-risk, and helmet use was associated with greater distances traveled.

Conclusions: The data fail to support the hypothesis that the increased safety provided by motorcycle helmet use is offset by more risk-taking while riding. The only evidence of risk compensation was that helmet use increased with greater amounts of travel.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

The Thailand motorcycle accident research project was funded by Honda Research and Development (Japan), Asian Honda Co. Ltd. (Thailand), and AP Honda Co. Ltd. (Thailand) and was performed at Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok (Dr. Vira Kasantikul, Principal Investigator). The Los Angeles research was done under contract DOT-HS-5-01160 between the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and the University of Southern California (Professor Hugh H. Hurt, Jr. Principal Investigator). The author is indebted to his friends, colleagues, and mentors, the late Professor Hugh H. Hurt, Jr., and the late Vira Kasantikul, MD.

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