Wobblers
Euthermic
- Location
- Minkowski Space
Dell, what exactly do you need?
Links to papers, the pdfs or just a summary? I could see what I can dig up on the PubMed and Science Citation Index for you.
The problem with insurance companies is that, while they're very good making up and reading acturial tables, for risks that can't be so easily quantified, they're at best going to err on what is the safe side (for them). A group of cyclists riding to Brighton through the night is one of those risks - common sense would say that helmets would help so they'll insist on helmets. You need to be able to present sound evidence, preferably a stack of papers which refutes their "it's obvious, so it must be true" approach.
Oh... and for the record, and to counter the Undead with their "I wouldn't be here today without my helmet" brigade, had I been wearing a helmet in my last and biggest crash, it would have been my head that would have hit the ground first - at 25 mph - rather than my shoulder. If I'd been lucky, I'd have turned up at A & E on the back of an ambulance strapped to a spinal board. A helmet is not some magical device that wards off all harm and I wish people would stop pretending that it is.
Links to papers, the pdfs or just a summary? I could see what I can dig up on the PubMed and Science Citation Index for you.
The problem with insurance companies is that, while they're very good making up and reading acturial tables, for risks that can't be so easily quantified, they're at best going to err on what is the safe side (for them). A group of cyclists riding to Brighton through the night is one of those risks - common sense would say that helmets would help so they'll insist on helmets. You need to be able to present sound evidence, preferably a stack of papers which refutes their "it's obvious, so it must be true" approach.
Oh... and for the record, and to counter the Undead with their "I wouldn't be here today without my helmet" brigade, had I been wearing a helmet in my last and biggest crash, it would have been my head that would have hit the ground first - at 25 mph - rather than my shoulder. If I'd been lucky, I'd have turned up at A & E on the back of an ambulance strapped to a spinal board. A helmet is not some magical device that wards off all harm and I wish people would stop pretending that it is.