Riding a bicycle : do we need more than a helmet ?

Author(s)
Abu-Kishk, I. Vaiman, M. Rosenfeld-Yehoshua, N. Kozer, E. Lotan, G. & Eshel, G.
Year
Abstract

Background of this article was to assess pediatric bicycle-related traumatization in view of types of injuries, incidence and modes of prevention. It was a retrospective study of pediatric cases admitted to the pediatric intensive care unit of a university-affiliated level II trauma hospital in Israel over 12 consecutive years. Results showed that forty-six patients (three girls, 43 boys) with bicycle-related injuries formed 1% of the total pediatric intensive care unit admissions during the study period. The number of patients with bicycle-related injuries increased significantly during recent years (1996–2001 vs 2002–07: P= 0.003). Most of the cases presented abdominal injuries (54.4%) followed by head (32.6%) and chest (13%) injuries. The median age of patients with abdominal trauma was significantly lower in comparison to patients with other types of injuries (P= 0.002). Abdominal cases required longer hospitalization compared with other patients (P= 0.003). Falling from a bicycle was the main mechanism of injury in abdominal cases (88%) (P= 0.003). Motor vehicle impacts were the main mechanism of injury in patients with head (60%) and chest (66.6%) trauma. It was concluded that the incidence of severe bicycle-related injuries requiring intensive care hospitalization is increasing and abdominal trauma forms the main portion of those injuries. The authors suggest introducing a trunk-protective measure for young bicyclists. Exact information on the mechanism of the injury is important for evaluating the injured patient more accurately. (Author/publisher)

Publication

Library number
20110258 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Pediatrics International, Vol. 52 (2010), No. 4 (August), p. 644-647, 26 ref.

Our collection

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