So my toot about helmet laws increasing heart disease has got a few replies by people wondering wtf. The way it works is that mandatory helmet laws reduce cycling, fewer people cycling results in an increase in obesity related illnesses like heart disease and diabetes.

One of, if not rhe best, things that a government can do to improve health at a population level is increasing active travel (walking and cycling).

1/n

https://theconversation.com/ditching-bike-helmets-laws-better-for-health-42

Ditching bike helmets laws better for health

With epidemics of diabetes and obesity threatening to bankrupt state health budgets, governments need to broaden their strategies to encourage physical activity. Allowing cyclists to ride without a helmet…

The Conversation

@quixoticgeek
This is nonsense.

Similar idiotic nonsense when motorcycle helmets, safety belts or masking (campaigns in 1940s about coughs and sneezes).

@raymaccarthy @quixoticgeek please compare the standards, testing and observed effects of those other things with the current weak "short standing fall onto flat or straight kerb" cycle helmets before assuming the opposition is similar. If car seatbelts were allowed to be ineffective in most collisions, would they have been compelled as widely? Why are cycle helmets no longer tested for hitting even a corner kerb?

@mjr @quixoticgeek
Where are they not tested?

No doubt standards vary worldwide.

Perhaps campaigning for better helmets than none for cycles, ebikes, escooter and skateboards.

Some eBikes are more powerful than 49cc Mopeds were when motorcycle helmets became mandatory in UK. They should need a licence and insurance & real helmet, just like mopeds do in Ireland and UK.

I bought an ebike and gave it away. Too dangerous! Most people I know have worn cycle helmets for decades.
Ban escooters.

@raymaccarthy @mjr the problem with that idea is that any helmet that actually offers meaningful protection would essentially be a motorbike helmet. At which point cyclists would all over heat in the summer (motorcyclists don't exert the same level as a pedal cyclist).

Cycling helmets are tested to the equivalent of a 20kph impact. Anyone going faster isn't protected.

@quixoticgeek @mjr
Anyone going faster than 20km?
That's not safe for ordinary people.

I was suggesting eBikes that are really electric versions of Mopeds should have insurance, licence and real helmet.

Many mopeds when helmet laws cam in in UK were LESS powerful than some ebikes. Some were less than 1.3kW

@raymaccarthy @quixoticgeek UK e-bikes are 0.25kW!
@raymaccarthy @quixoticgeek Well, yes, but we can't sensibly discuss laws as if they'll have much effect on people who already ignore existing laws. Most people ignoring the power limit law will probably also ignore a helmet law.
@mjr @raymaccarthy the difference is you can spot someone not wearing a helmet at a distance, much harder to spot someone who's bypassed the limiter on their ebike...
@quixoticgeek @raymaccarthy much harder, but still easy here due to the speeds they do without pedalling.