The Effect of Motorcycle Helmet Use
on the Probability of Fatality and the Severity of
Head And Neck Injuries
Highlights of Helmet Effectiveness
Study
Jonathan P. Goldstein, Ph.D.
Department of Economics
Bowdoin College
Brunswick, Maine 04011
This article evaluates the
effectiveness of motorcycle helmets in accident
situations. A latent variable model is developed and
estimated. It is concluded that (1) motorcycle
helmets have no statistically significant effect on
the probability of fatality; (2) helmets reduce the
severity of head injuries; and (3) past a critical
impact speed [13 MPH], helmets increase the severity
of neck injuries. Further analysis establishes the
qualitative and quantitative nature of the head-neck
injury trade-off.
Methodology
1. This study employs standard statistical
techniques (regression analysis) to isolate the main
determinants of death and injury severity resulting
from motorcycle accidents.
2. The data analyzed in this study were provided
by the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration, U.S. Department of Transportation and
originally collected by Hurt et al. (1981), contract
No. DOT HS-5-01160. These data are currently
recognized as the most accurate and detailed
available on motorcycle accidents (See pp. 11-12).
3. The effectiveness of helmets and other
determinants of death and injury severity are
estimated from a causal model. Three variants of one
causal model are used to isolate the determinants of:
(1) the probability of a fatality; (2) the severity
of head injuries; and (3) the severity of neck
injuries.
4. The use of a causal model distinguishes the
research methodology of this study from previous
studies. The advantage of this approach lies in the
ability to estimate the separate effects of several
simultaneous and interrelated causes of motorcycle
fatalities and injury severities (pp. 2-4). Previous
studies simply divide accident victims into a
helmeted group and non-helmeted group. As a result
all differences in fatality rates, injury rates and
injury severities between groups are erroneously
attributed to helmet use. These comparisons fail to
consider other differences between helmet users and
non-users which influence the probability of death
and the severity of injuries. The most plausible
hypothesis is that helmeted riders are more
risk-averse and thus: (1) have lower pre-crash and
thus crash speeds; and (2) are less likely to combine
alcohol consumption and driving. Such behavior,
rather than helmet use per se, may dramatically
reduce the probability of fatality or the severity of
an injury. Only a causal model that considers crash
speed, helmet use, alcohol use and other pertinent
variables can isolate the separate contribution of
each determinant of the severity of injury or
probability of death.
Causal Model (pp. 4-8)
1. The causal model considers three broad
categories of the causes of death and injury
severity. These include factors governed by the laws
of physics, physiological factors. and human factors
and operator characteristics.
2. The physical factors considered include: the
kinetic energy (potential for bodily damage)
transferred to the motorcycle operator by the impact,
compressibility of the impacted object, helmet use,
and possible engineering limitations of helmets (as
affected by the impact speed that the helmet is
subjected to in the crash).
3. The physiological factors considered include:
operator's age, blood alcohol level, drug
involvement, and permanent physiological impairment.
4. The human factors and operator characteristics
considered include: rider on-road experience, whether
the operator had taken the correct evasive action for
the particular accident situation, driver training,
and the operator's past accident and violation
histories.
5. Numerous other determinants were also
considered.
Results (pp. 13-18)
1. Helmets are shown to have no statistically
significant effect on the probability of a fatality
given that a motorcycle accident has occurred. This
means that based on standard statistical tests we
cannot reject the claim that helmets do not affect
the probability that a rider will survive a
motorcycle accident.
2. The major determinants of fatality are the
rider's crash speed (kinetic energy) and blood
alcohol level.
3. For the average rider involved in the average
accident, it is found that the probability of death
increases from 2.1% to 11.3% when the rider's blood
alcohol level increases from 0.0 to 0.1 (from sober
to legally intoxicated in most states).
4. In the same vein, an increase in the crash
speed from 40 to 60 mph increases the probability of
death from 7.1% to 36.3%
5. It is found that helmets have a statistically
significant effect in reducing head injury severity.
We can reject the hypothesis that helmets have no
effect on head injuries in favor of the claim that
they reduce head injuries.
6. It is shown that past a critical impact
velocity to the helmet (approximately 13 mph), helmet
use has a statistically significant effect which
increases the severity of neck injuries. Thus we
reject the claim that, helmets have no effect on neck
injuries in favor of the claim that, past a critical
impact speed, they exacerbate neck injuries.
7. As a result of (5) and (6), we establish
that a tradeoff between head and neck injuries
confronts a potential helmet user. Past a critical
impact speed to the helmet (13 mph), which is likely
to occur in real life accident situations helmet use
reduces the severity of head injuries at the expense
of increasing the severity of neck injuries.
8. Further statistical tests reveal the
qualitative nature of this tradeoff. It is shown that
an individual who wears a helmet and experiences an
impact velocity to the head greater than 13 mph may
avoid either severe or minor head injuries and incur
either severe or minor neck injuries; all
permutations of the tradeoff are equally likely to
occur.
Policy Implications (pp. 18-20)
1. If a major concern of policy makers is the
prevention of fatalities, helmet legislation may not
be effective in achieving that objective.
2. If the overall cost to society of motorcycle
accidents is the issue, then cost-benefit analyses
that adequately consider the tradeoff between head
and neck injuries must be conducted before the
cost effectiveness of helmets can be determined.
3. Until the injury tradeoff issue is more
carefully studied, it cannot be concluded that
mandatory helmet use laws are an effective method to
eradicate the slaughter and maiming, of individuals
involved in motorcycle accidents.
4. A more effective policy approach would be two
pronged, including both policies to prevent accidents
and policies that effectively reduce the probability
of death and the severity of injuries.
5. Policies to prevent accidents include: (1) the
education of the general driving public; (2) the
education of a younger and more inexperienced
population of motorcyclists on the issues of accident
avoidance and the proper use and control of high
horsepower machines: (3) stricter enforcement of
drunk driving laws; and (4) implementation of alcohol
awareness programs.
6. Policies to reduce death and injury severity
include: stricter enforcement of speed limits. the
alcohol related policies suggested in (5) and
mandatory driver training and education programs
which emphasize the proper execution of evasive
action.
The Study...
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© Copyright Jonathan P.
Goldstein Ph.D. 1986. All Rights Reserved.