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Debra Kubecka |
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May 25, 2004 |
(202)
408-1711 x15 |
MOTORCYCLE
HELMETS MAKE $EN$E FOR ALL OF US
Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety Warns Governors
"There's No Free Ride -- Beware of Potential Taxpayer Costs
of Helmet-Less Riders"
Washington, D.C., May 25, 2004 -- As Motorcycle Safety
Awareness Month comes to a close, a review of motorcycling safety
and state legislative considerations of motorcycle helmet laws
paints a dismal picture, says Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety
(Advocates).
To
date:
Only
19 states and the District of Columbia currently require all
riders to use motorcycle helmets.
Of
the remaining 31 states, 28 have laws on the books that require
only riders under 18 or 21 to wear helmets, and 3 have no helmet
laws at all. Age-specific laws are equivalent to no law at all
because they are essentially unenforceable.
Since
1997, six (6) states have repealed their all-rider laws (Arkansas,
Florida, Kentucky, Louisiana, Pennsylvania and Texas) resulting
in documented increases in head injuries, deaths and health
care costs.
Preliminary
2003 data from the national Fatal Analysis Reporting System
(FARS) indicates motorcycle deaths have increased for 6 years
in a row, up by 11% in 2003.
Since
1997, motorcycle deaths nationally have increased from 2,116
to 3,592, a 59% increase.
At
a time when many states are struggling with Medicaid and other
health care crises, an alarming trend has emerged as 15 of the
19 states with all-rider laws considered repealing them in the
2003/2004 legislative sessions.
Hospital
studies in states that have recently repealed helmet laws show
costs for treating brain-injured motorcyclists soared in the
years immediately following repeal, and deaths increased by
large percentages.
"Motorcyclists who believe their right to ride with a helmet
is a matter of personal choice ignore the cost to taxpayers and
governments of picking up the pieces, and the tab, when they crash,"
said Judith Lee Stone, president of Advocates for Highway and
Auto Safety (Advocates). "Governors should heed our warning
that state coffers are drained by hidden costs of increasing motorcycle
deaths and brain injuries due to lack of helmet use. Only about
50 percent of motorcycle crash victims have private health care
insurance, placing the cost burden of treatment for the other
50 percent squarely on the taxpayer's ticket."
Of
the states that attempted to repeal their all-rider laws this
past year, most did not consider the publicly assisted health
care costs associated with brain-injured riders and reported no
fiscal impact in their analysis of the bills. "Only Maryland
got it right in calculating the fiscal impact if its law were
repealed," said Stone. Maryland's Department of Legislative
Services estimated the cost to Medicaid could go up by $750,000
the first year and increase to almost a million dollars a year
in ensuing years. The fiscal impact was a factor in the unsuccessful
repeal attempt.
"It
is imperative that states considering repeals factor in the public
health care and social services costs that result from brain-injured
riders," urged Stone. "There is a specific and dramatic
tradeoff. We are grateful that Maryland figured it out, kept their
all-rider law on the books, and set an example for other states."
Helmet-less
riders sustain severe and traumatic brain injuries that often
require costly long-term medical and rehabilitative treatment.
"Clearly, public monies spent on head injuries sustained
by riders without helmets means less for teachers or public safety,"
Stone added. "A rider's choice stops being personal when
it ends up costing all of us."
Numerous
studies show that the average hospital charges for helmet-less
riders are significantly more than for helmeted riders, ranging
from 10 percent to 200 percent higher. For victims of serious
brain injury, acute hospital care might be only the first stage
of a long and costly treatment program. Other costs include ongoing
medical care, long-term nursing care, rehabilitative therapy,
and lost wages.
The
Texas Trauma Registry reported that in the first three months
after the state repealed their all-rider law in 1997, the cost
of treating a brain-injured motorcyclist went from $18,400 (in
the same three months in 1996) to more than $32,000, and motorcycle
deaths doubled by 2002.
States
that considered but failed to repeal their all-rider helmet laws
in the 2003/2004 legislative sessions were California, Georgia,
Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska,
Nevada, New York, North Carolina, Tennessee, Vermont, Virginia,
and West Virginia.
States
with all-rider use laws experience use rates close to 100 percent.
Those without such laws usually have use rates at 50% or lower.
-30-
Please
see the accompanying documents:
Fiscal
Impact of Helmet Laws
Increase
in Deaths after Helmet Law Repeals
Advocates
for Highway and Auto Safety (Advocates), an alliance of consumer,
health and safety groups and insurance companies and agents working
together to make America's roads safer, is actively involved at
the federal and state levels to reduce the terrible tragedy of
crashes to families across the nation. More information about
the unfinished highway and auto safety agenda can be found on
Advocates' web site, www.saferoads.org.
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