Motorcycle helmet use and injury outcome and hospitalization costs from crashes in Washington State.
J Rowland,
F Rivara,
P Salzberg,
R Soderberg,
R Maier and
T Koepsell
Washington State Department of Health, Seattle, Wash., USA.
OBJECTIVES. The incidence, type, severity, and costs of crash-relatedinjuries requiring hospitalization or resulting in death werecompared for helmeted and unhelmeted motorcyclists. METHODS.This was a retrospective cohort study of injured motorcyclistsin Washington State in 1989. Motorcycle crash data were linkedto statewide hospitalization and death data. RESULTS. The 2090crashes included in this study resulted in 409 hospitalizations(20%) and 59 fatalities (28%). Although unhelmeted motorcyclistswere only slightly more likely to be hospitalized overall, theywere more severely injured, nearly three times more likely tohave been head injured, and nearly four times more likely tohave been severely or critically head injured than helmetedriders. Unhelmeted riders were also more likely to be readmittedto a hospital for follow-up treatment and to die from theirinjuries. The average hospital stay for unhelmeted motorcyclistswas longer, and cost more per case; the cost of hospitalizationfor unhelmeted motorcyclists was 60% more overall ($3.5 vs $2.2million). CONCLUSIONS. Helmet use is strongly associated withreduced probability and severity of injury, reduced economicimpact, and a reduction in motorcyclist deaths.
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