lowing wrote:
Pug wrote:
lowing wrote:
The point of this thread is to find out if people think helmet laws are intrusion on personal lives by govt.
What do you think?
I think it is a govt. intrusion on personal choice. Bikers know the risks they take and no one else gets hurt by them deciding not to wear a helmet. I would support a one day or half day class to be mandatory before receiving a license about helmet safety, but after that they should be on their own.
I am not a biker, who am I to tell them they MUST wear a helmet when they ride, and why would I care if they don't?
Seems like an oddly familar and ironic, given the fact rising health insurance costs are something we all share.
http://forums.bf2s.com/viewtopic.php?pi … 2#p3241982http://www.localinsurance.com/autoinsur … -laws.aspx-"Institute data suggest that helmet laws have reduced total health care charges for motorcycle accidents in some states."
http://www.realicu.com/content/motorcyc … edom-part1-"One study found that helmets were 37% effective in preventing death and 65% effective in preventing brain injury."
-"The Pennsylvania motorcycle helmet law was repealed in 2003. The helmet use among riders in crashes decreased from 82% to 58%. Head injury deaths increased 66%; non-head injury deaths increased by 25%. Motorcycle related head injury hospitalizations increased 78% compared with 28% for non-head injury hospitalizations."
-"Several studies have shown that helmets do, indeed, decrease peripheral vision by approximately 20%. This reduction, however, is small and was shown to have no impact on motorcycle safety or collision rate"
-"Most healthcare expenses for the head injured patients occur later during the rehabilitation and placement phases of their recovery. Many patients remain permanently disabled and never return to gainful employment. "
-"If the patient has no insurance, it becomes the taxpayer's responsibility to provide funding for the long term medical care. Even for insured patients, the tremendous cost of caring for the chronically disabled head injured patient reflects in higher insurance premiums and overall healthcare costs. The individual choice of ignoring personal safety becomes a burden for society."
Last edited by Pug (2011-07-06 09:32:43)