Dutch cyclists urged to wear helmets as road deaths rise
    Brain is very vulnerable

    WORLD  17 June 2024 - 08:01

    The Guardian reprints the article about helmet-wearing which is rare for the Dutch bike riders but authorities are pushing people to think again, Caliber.Az reprints the article.

    When 42-year-old Myrthe Boss gets on her bike to go shopping in the Dutch town of Ede, she pops on a helmet. This act, considered essential in many countries, marks Boss out as something of a radical in the Netherlands, where helmet-wearing is rare.

    Now, however, faced with rising number of traffic deaths linked in particular to older riders and e-bikes, the Dutch government and provinces – not to mention neurologists like Boss – are pushing for cyclists to think again.

    “I’m a huge fan of cycling but it’s important to protect ourselves,” Boss said. “The brain is a very vulnerable organ with limited capacity to recover. If you fall from a bike and sustain a brain injury, this has long-term consequences. And a large proportion of people who fall while cycling have brain injury.”

    She knows this all too well: in 2019 her mother died after a collision with a car at a roundabout. “A helmet doesn’t prevent everything but it does ensure there is less impact from the street on your head,” Boss said. “You see what it does in your family when you lose someone that way.”

    The number of cyclists seriously injured each year in the Netherlands has risen by 27 per cent in the last decade, according to an injury prevention organisation, Veiligheid NL. The Dutch Institute for Road Safety Research (SWOV) found that if all cyclists wore helmets there would be 85 fewer deaths annually. Meanwhile, the European Transport Safety Council says fatalities in older people and e-bikers have set Dutch road safety “back in time 15 years”.

    Cycling is part of the country’s cultural identity and 28 per cent of journeys are made by bike. Child learners often wear helmets but adults tend to be highly resistant.

    In an attempt to change this mentality, the Dutch transport ministry plans to publish guidelines next month on voluntary helmet use. Provinces such as Gelderland and Utrecht are already doing their bit, running successful discount promotions, while takeaway companies such as Just Eat now made helmets mandatory for delivery cyclists. A recent editorial in the medical journal Medisch Contact had a simple headline: “Looks good on you, that skull fracture.”

    Even the Fietsersbond cyclist association is changing its tone, while stressing that there is no excuse for reckless drivers or poor infrastructure. “We have the position that helmets don’t prevent accidents but it can be a wise decision to wear one on a voluntary basis,” said its director, Esther van Garderen. “Emphasising too much that you should wear a helmet would discourage people from cycling sometimes, though, and has the air of victim-blaming. I think it’s coming slowly, although there’s no such thing as a society with zero danger and we value our culture where you can cycle safe and free.”

    Denmark, which prides itself on an equally welcoming climate for cyclists, looks askance at its southern neighbours. Martin Hein, a transport ministry spokesperson, said that while helmets were not compulsory there, many Danes had taken the hint after safe cycling campaigns by NGOs. “Because they’re smart,” he said. “We have very little other than our heads and if we don’t take care of our heads we won’t be able to provide for our families.”

    Although countries such as Australia and Sweden have strict helmet rules, the Danes were concerned that a law would put people off cycling and end up being worse for their health. The freedom-loving Dutch have a similar reluctance, according to Patrick Rugebregt, a spokesperson for the SWOV, which has studied a recent helmet campaign in Zeeland province. “Public opinion is the most significant obstacle,” he said.

    Bart Groothuijze, who runs the Castodian foundation promoting safer motorbiking, blames a misplaced sense of freedom and vanity. “My position is that if you don’t wear a helmet riding a bike, a horse or whatever vehicle in which you are exposed to all kinds of elements, you are either stupid or you will become stupid after you crash,” he said.

    “On one hand the Dutch are quite vain, and secondly the Dutch don’t like to be commanded: if someone says you have to do this, they will do the opposite. That’s embedded in our collective DNA. But one good thing with e-bikes is that the children of elderly people are saying to their parents: you should be wearing a helmet. It’s becoming more normal.”

    Caliber.Az

    Subscribe to our Telegram channel


Read also

Turkish authorities disrupt international drug cartel in Spain

26 June 2024 - 11:52

Julian Assange pleads guilty for leaking America's national secrets Banned from returning to US without permission

26 June 2024 - 11:28

Israel accuses UN of keeping food at warehouses in Gaza

26 June 2024 - 11:04

Pentagon ex-advisor warns US of losing NATO ally

26 June 2024 - 10:40

Russian FM: BRICS to suspend admitting new members

26 June 2024 - 10:27

Russia, Ukraine each return 90 prisoners of war

26 June 2024 - 10:02
ADVERTS
Video
Latest news

    Security chief: Armenia's future relations with Russia hinge on Moscow's position

    26 June 2024 - 12:31

    Presidential aide: Diplomacy without military strength akin to music without instruments

    26 June 2024 - 12:17

    President Aliyev receives Italian-made military transport aircraft C-27J Spartan

    26 June 2024 - 12:04

    Turkish authorities disrupt international drug cartel in Spain

    26 June 2024 - 11:52

    Azerbaijan's Air Force: Guardians of the nation's skies

    PHOTO

    26 June 2024 - 11:40

    Julian Assange pleads guilty for leaking America's national secrets

    Banned from returning to US without permission

    26 June 2024 - 11:28

    Armenia receives tenth package of proposals from Azerbaijan

    26 June 2024 - 11:16

    Israel accuses UN of keeping food at warehouses in Gaza

    26 June 2024 - 11:04

    German Bundeswehr set to secure massive munitions production contract

    26 June 2024 - 10:53

    Pentagon ex-advisor warns US of losing NATO ally

    26 June 2024 - 10:40

    Russian FM: BRICS to suspend admitting new members

    26 June 2024 - 10:27

    Former Swiss president elected Council of Europe chief

    26 June 2024 - 10:15

    Russia, Ukraine each return 90 prisoners of war

    26 June 2024 - 10:02

    Azerbaijan gains victory over Armenia in anti-terrorist operation rapidly, minister says

    26 June 2024 - 09:50

    SOCAR, Germany's VNG ink MoU for natural gas & renewable energy co-op

    26 June 2024 - 09:38

    Azerbaijan celebrates 106th anniversary of Armed Forces

    26 June 2024 - 09:22

    Azerbaijan confirms identities of 20 missing Individuals from First Karabakh War

    26 June 2024 - 09:10

    Climate crisis threatens West Africa's coastal cities

    26 June 2024 - 09:03

    Global green-energy transition faces critical challenges

    26 June 2024 - 08:17

    When will China have a sixth-gen fighter jet?

    26 June 2024 - 06:13

    China stands to gain significantly from Ukraine war

    26 June 2024 - 04:10

    Western economies urged to adapt to Chinese innovation in EV sector

    26 June 2024 - 02:07

    Macron's rightward shift backfires, bolstering far-right National Rally

    26 June 2024 - 00:05

    Iran’s new nuclear threat

    Weaponizing threshold status

    25 June 2024 - 22:03

    Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry congrats Slovenia on National Day

    25 June 2024 - 21:14

    Iranian presidential candidates discuss foreign policy in penultimate TV debate

    25 June 2024 - 20:59

    Baku hosts 11th consular consultations between Azerbaijani & Russian Foreign Ministries

    25 June 2024 - 20:42

    Iran reaffirms commitment to JCPOA, slams US & E3/EU non-compliance

    25 June 2024 - 20:39

    Azerbaijani foreign minister meets Russian envoy to discuss peace process with Armenia

    25 June 2024 - 20:30

    Federal cabinet approves national counter-terrorism plan amid opposition concerns

    25 June 2024 - 20:22

    Albanian parliamentary commission holds hearing for ambassador candidate to Azerbaijan

    25 June 2024 - 20:08

    Top official: Russia, Azerbaijan forge robust partnership

    25 June 2024 - 19:30

    ANAMA, EU delegation hold conference on combating mine threat

    PHOTO

    25 June 2024 - 19:18

    SOCAR, Equinor explore future collaboration

    25 June 2024 - 19:06

    Azerbaijan, IEA working on new nenewable energy, efficiency commitments

    25 June 2024 - 18:54

    Erdogan condemns Dagestan attacks in call with Putin

    25 June 2024 - 18:42

    Turkish, Armenian foreign ministers hold telephone conversation

    25 June 2024 - 18:39

    Israel’s top court rules ultra-Orthodox Jews must be drafted into military

    25 June 2024 - 18:30

    Estonian prime minister to become Europe's top diplomat

    25 June 2024 - 18:16

    Turkish FM contrasts BRICS, G7 in terms of scope and objectives

    25 June 2024 - 18:04

All news