BICYCLE SAFETY BEHAVIOR IN PARIS AND BOSTON.

Author(s)
OSBERG, J.S. STILES, S.C. & OHENE-KWAKU, A.S.A.R.E.
Year
Abstract

Concerns about bicycle-related deaths and injuries have led to extensive injury prevention efforts in the United States, yet these concerns are not universal. For instance, in France attitudes toward bicycle safety are quite different. To understand more about variation in urban bicycle safety behavior, the authors observed passing bicyclists in Paris and Boston. In addition to helmet use, they looked at use of lights at night. Among 5,808 passing bicyclists, there were large differences in helmet and light use: only 2.2% of Paris bicyclists wore helmets compared to 31.5% in Boston. In contrast, 46.8% of nighttime Paris bicyclists had working head or tail lights compared to only 14.8% in Boston. These large and seemingly contradictory percentages are the result of different laws and public health priorities, types of bicycle riding and perceived risks. Suggestions for further research and practical ways to improve US bicycle safety behavior are discussed. (Author/publisher).

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Publication

Library number
I 899888 IRRD 9808 /83 /
Source

ACCIDENT ANALYSIS AND PREVENTION. 1998 /09. 30(5) PP679-687

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.