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RESEARCH AND PRACTICE |
Kimberly M. Auman, Joseph A. Kufera, Michael F. Ballesteros, and Patricia C. Dischinger are with the Charles McC. Mathias Jr National Study Center for Trauma and Emergency Medical Services, University of Maryland, Baltimore. At the time of the study, John E. Smialek was with the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, Baltimore.
Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Kimberly M. Auman, MS, National Study Center for Trauma and EMS, University of Maryland, 701 W Pratt St, 5th Floor, Baltimore, MD 21201 (e-mail: Kauman{at}som.umaryland.edu).
| ABSTRACT |
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Objectives. This study sought to determine the impact of Marylands all-rider motorcycle helmet law (enacted on October 1, 1992) on preventing deaths and traumatic brain injuries among motorcyclists.
Methods. Statewide motorcyclist fatalities occurring during seasonally comparable 33-month periods immediately preceding and following enactment of the law were compared.
Results. The motorcyclist fatality rate dropped from 10.3 per 10 000 registered motorcycles prelaw to 4.5 postlaw despite almost identical numbers of registered motorcycles. Motorcyclists wearing helmets had a lower risk of traumatic brain injury than those not wearing helmets (odds ratio = 0.31, 95% confidence interval = 0.14, 0.68).
Conclusions. Marylands controversial motorcycle helmet law appears to be an effective public health policy and may be responsible for saving many lives.
| INTRODUCTION |
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It is well known that motorcycle helmets are effective in preventing or reducing the severity of motorcycle-related head injuries116; however, between 1975 and 1983, 28 states either weakened or repealed their helmet use laws. In response to the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1966, Maryland mandated in 1967 that all motorcycle operators or passengers wear helmets approved by the state department of motor vehicles. In 1979 this law was weakened to require only minors to wear approved helmets, but on October 1, 1992, a new law reestablishing a helmet requirement for all motorcycle operators and passengers was enacted.
The purpose of the present study was to determine the impact of the most recent helmet law on preventing deaths among motorcyclists in Maryland. We also examined the association, if any, between traumatic brain injury (TBI) and helmet use.
| METHODS |
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Data Abstraction and Linkage
Each motorcyclist autopsy report was reviewed for demographic, injury, and helmet use information. As a means of determining the location of the crash (i.e., urban vs rural) and confirming helmet usage, all motorcycle driver fatalities were linked, via probabilistic linking methods, with police report data to obtain the road name and reference intersection of the crash. The matched records were geocoded through census tract data to differentiate between urban (at least 250 persons per square mile) and rural regions.
Definitions
Traumatic brain injury was defined according to the clinical case definition found in the Guidelines for Surveillance of Central Nervous System Injury, used by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.17 In a given case, all available documents (e.g., autopsy report, investigator report, police report, photographs) were used to determine whether the motorcyclist was wearing a helmet. If 2 sources disagreed as to whether a helmet was used, or if there was no indication of helmet usage in the records, helmet use was recorded as "unknown."
Statistical Analysis
Pearsons
2 statistic was used in comparing between-group distributions. The BreslowDay test for homogeneity was used to determine whether the association between TBI and helmet use within the 2 study periods was similar. A P value below .05 represented a statistically significant result. When appropriate, odds ratios (ORs) and their 95% confidence intervals (CIs) are reported.
| RESULTS |
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Prelaw vs Postlaw
Of the 212 fatalities, 130 (61.3%) occurred in the prelaw period and 82 (38.7%) occurred in the postlaw period, representing a 36.9% decrease. There was a significant increase in the number of postlaw motorcyclists who wore helmets (Table 1
). Before the law, 24.6% of motorcyclists involved in fatal crashes wore helmets, as compared with 80.5% after the law.
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Motorcyclist fatality counts and rates per 10 000 registered vehicles are presented in Table 2
. Before enactment of the law, the motorcyclist fatality rate ranged from a low of 7.8 to a high of 10.2 per 10 000 registered vehicles. The rate has since declined to 4.5 despite almost identical numbers of vehicles registered in 1992 and 1996.
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| DISCUSSION |
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Although helmet use is probably responsible for this decrease, other factors may have contributed. The law change may have affected the risk behaviors of drivers or reduced the number of motorcycle sales, high-risk riders, or miles driven.
According to the Maryland Motor Vehicle Administration, the number of registered motorcycles in the state fluctuated between 1990 and 1996, but there was no dominant decreasing trend after the law change. However, the motorcycle fatality rate per 10 000 registered vehicles fell steadily, and the overall decrease for the study period was 56% (from 10.3 in 1992 to 4.5 in 1996). This decrease is consistent with results of studies conducted in California20 and Louisiana.22
The current study also suggests that mandatory helmet laws are associated with increases in helmet usage; our data showed a dramatic increase in the percentage of helmet users among motorcyclist fatalities, from 24.6% to 80.5%. Our helmet use estimate is an underestimation, because misclassification of helmet use is biased toward nonuse. Other studies have reported that compliance rates approach 100% in the presence of a mandatory helmet law.6,18,21,22,24
Our estimate of 80% is below that of other research, because our study population consisted of only fatal accident victims, which would tend to include more individuals not wearing helmets. A study from California revealed similar percentages when only fatal crashes were examined (80.1% with a helmet law vs 21.5% with no law).20
There is additional evidence indicating that helmet laws increase helmet use. A study conducted in Louisiana demonstrated a helmet use decrease followed by an increase with the repeal and reinstatement of a similar law.21,22
The present findings indicate that motorcyclists wearing helmets sustained fewer TBIs than those not wearing helmets. Our results, although consistent with those of a large number of published studies,317 represent an underestimate of the protective effect of helmet use in that TBIs among only fatally injured motorcyclists were examined, encompassing the most serious crashes. Injured motorcyclists who use a helmet have a lower mortality rate than those not using a helmet.6,13 Because the present study was based on fatal crashes, our population overrepresented individuals not using helmets.
Increases in the discrepancy in TBIs between those using and not using helmets would be revealed in an analysis based on patients with less severe injuries (e.g., emergency department patients). Other studies have shown that, in addition to preventing head injuries, helmet use is associated with shorter hospital stays,9,13,16,18,21,22 fewer hospital readmissions,13 lower overall injury severity,6,9,11,13,14,26 less need for rehabilitation,16 and lower total hospital costs.9,13,1518,21,26
Many factors, such as vehicle miles traveled, engine sizes of the motorcycles that crash, and vehicular speed, may confound the relationship between helmet laws and death rates. We did not address these factors, because the data were not available from the police reports.
Another important area that we did not address is type of helmet worn. One study that examined the protective effects of full-face motorcycle helmets vs nonstandard helmets showed that the former were more effective in preventing and mitigating head injuries.27 In fact, when weather, road location, motorcycle type, riding position (driver vs passenger), age, and sex were controlled, use of nonstandard helmets did not statistically differ from nonuse of a helmet with respect to head injury.28 In our study, helmet type was identified in only 5.7% of reviewed cases, because there was no code in the police report records to capture this information.
| CONCLUSIONS |
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| Acknowledgments |
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This article is dedicated to the memory of Dr John E. Smialek, chief medical examiner for the state of Maryland, who died unexpectedly in May 2001.
We would like to thank the staff of the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, Carl Soderstrom, MD, of the National Study Center for Trauma and EMS for their assistance on this project.
Human Participant Protection
Study protocols were approved by the institutional review board of the University of Maryland, Baltimore (IRB no. 0101317).
| Footnotes |
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Accepted for publication July 5, 2001.
| References |
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