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Journal Article

Citation

Lee JL, Chen TC, Huang HC, Chen RJ. Traffic Injury Prev. 2017; 18(6): 666-671.

Affiliation

Taipei Medical University, School of Medicine.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/15389588.2016.1204650

PMID

27715312

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Motorcycles are the most popular vehicles in Taiwan, where more than 14.8 million motorcycles (1 motorcycle per 1.6 people) are in service. Despite the mandatory helmet law passed in 1997, less than 80% of motorcyclists in Taiwan wear helmets.

OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to analyse the effect of using motorcycle helmets on fatality rates.

METHODS: A clinical data set comprising 2,868 trauma patients was analysed; the cross-sectional registration database was administered by a university medical centre in Central Taiwan. A path analysis framework and multiple logistic regressions were used to estimate the marginal effect of using a helmet on mortality.

RESULTS: Using a helmet did not directly reduce the mortality rate, but rather indirectly reduced the mortality rate through intervening variables such as the severity of head injuries, number of craniotomies, and complications during therapeutic processes. Wearing a helmet can reduce the fatality rate by 1.3%, the rate of severe head injury by 34.5%, the craniotomy rate by 7.8%, and the rate of complications during therapeutic processes by 1.5%. These rates comprise 33.3% of the mortality rate for people who do not wear helmets, 67.3% of the severe head injury rate, 60.0% of the craniotomy rate, and 12.2% of the rate of complications during therapeutic processes.

DISCUSSION: Wearing a helmet and trauma system designation are crucial factors that reduce the fatality rate.


Language: en

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