The Helmet Update
Volume 21, #3 - August 19, 2003
All issues index
Study Finds Bicycle Helmets Don't Fit Well
A study by pediatricians in Falmouth, Massachusetts, tested the ability of kids and parents to fit bicycle helmets. It
concluded that most did not fit them well.
The investigators asked patients to bring in the child's helmet, and supplied a helmet if the patient forgot. The child
or parent then fitted the helmet if it was a loaner, choosing one that was closest to the one they had at home (Alpha,
Bell, Louis Garneau or Seattle Bike). Then the researchers assessed the helmet's condition and fit.
The results were dismal, with only 4 per cent passing the study's standard, and a full 96 per cent failing somewhere
along the way. But going beyond fit, the investigators' 14 criteria included the condition of the helmet, and only 55 per
cent passed that section of the assessment. Their strap tightness criteria required the helmet to pull down (no distance
specified) in front when the mouth was opened. Perhaps a more realistic number for bad fit comes from the percentage of
helmets that passed the basic stability tests for one inch of maximum movement: front to back (52 per cent -- we would
have guessed even lower) and side to side (73 per cent). Even if you find some of their criteria too stringent, a full 80
per cent failed the basic stability part of the assessment. That corresponds to what we hear from the field from bike
rodeo fitters and others who deal with kids who come to events with badly fitted helmets or helmets in poor
condition.
We welcome this study, documenting how difficult it is to fit a bicycle helmet. Fit is indeed a problem for all ages, not
just for kids. We have been pushing it as the next frontier in helmet safety. One of our warnings is that it will take
you longer than you think to fit a helmet well, so we would expect that the 44 per cent who did not bring their own
helmets in would probably not take enough time while fitting in a doctors office. (The study comments only on how much
time it took the doctors--patients were allowed as much time as they wanted.) But wherever the fitting is done, most
parents and kids quit trying to improve the fit long before the job is really done well. We have
a page
up on fitting helmets, of course.
Ultimately we think the responsibility for helmets that are too hard to fit rests with the manufacturer, since 80 per
cent or more of the buyers can't be wrong! We consumers need auto-fit helmet technology, but we don't have it yet. So the
alternative is to learn how to fit your helmet and take the time to get it right. It is a survival skill in our culture
well worth mastering. Otherwise you are not getting all the protection you paid for.
The study is titled "Bicycle Helmet Assessment During Well Visits Reveals Severe Shortcomings in Condition and Fit" by
Gregory W. Parkinson, MD, FAAP and Kelly E. Hike, BA. It appeared in The Journal of Pediatrics. Vol. 112, No. 2, August
2003, pp. 320-323.
ANSI publicly adopts ASTM
bike helmet standards
In an article posted on their website on July 16th, ANSI has for the first time acknowledged
publicly that their bicycle helmet standards are now the ASTM bike helmet standards, referring to them as ANSI/ASTM
standards.
The old ANSI standard with its less stringent testing had been withdrawn by ANSI, leaving many US state and local helmet
laws still specifying that standard and therefore perhaps weakening them. This acknowledgement of a joint standard may
eliminate that problem. The current ASTM standard is equivalent to the CPSC bicycle helmet standard, so meeting "the ANSI
standard" now means meeting the ASTM and CPSC standards as well.
The Helmet Update - Bicycle Helmet Safety Institute
Randy Swart, Editor
4611 Seventh Street South
Arlington, VA 22204-1419 USA
(703) 486-0100 (voice)
(703) 486-0576 (fax)
www.helmets.org