Finnish Transport Infrastructure Agency, P.O. Box 33, FI-00521 Helsinki, Finland.
Medical Faculty, University of Helsinki, Haartmaninkatu 8, P.O. Box 63, 00014, Finland.
Injury. 2024 May;55(5):111232. doi: 10.1016/j.injury.2023.111232. Epub 2023 Nov 23.
The Finnish national Traffic Safety Strategy 2022-2026 seeks to halve the number of road fatalities and serious injuries from 2020 to 2030. The strategy states that better information on bicycle crashes is needed for safety promotion. The aim of this study was to describe the demographics, injury characteristics, alcohol involvement, and helmet use of severely injured cyclists and to compare single bicycle crashes (falling alone or hitting a fixed object) to collisions.
We identified all bicycle crashes between 2006 and 2021 from the Helsinki Trauma Registry (HTR). Variables analysed were basic patient demographics, Abbreviated Injury Scale (AIS) codes, AIS 3+ injuries, injured body regions, patient Injury Severity Score (ISS) and New Injury Severity Score (NISS), 30-day in-hospital mortality, ICU length of stay, injury mechanism, alcohol use by the injured cyclists, and helmet use.
Of the 325 severe (NISS >15) cycling injury patients in the HTR, 53.5 % were injured in single crashes and 46.5 % in collisions with a moving object. Most (71.4 %) patients were men and mean age of all patients was 54.1 years (SD 16.7). Alcohol was detected in 23.1 % of cases and more often in single crashes (32.8 %) than in collisions (11.9 %). Less than a third (29.2 %) of all cyclists wore a helmet; those who wore a helmet had fewer serious (AIS 3+) head injuries than those who did not. Cyclists injured in collisions had higher ISS and NISS scores than those injured in single crashes. Serious (AIS 3+) injuries in extremities or in pelvic girdle were more common in collisions than in single crashes.
Among severely injured cyclists, single bicycle crashes were more common; alcohol was more often detected in single bicycle crashes than in collisions. Overall injury severity was higher in collisions than in single crashes. Helmet users had less AIS 3+ head injuries than non-users. Attention should be focused on preventing alcohol-related cycling injuries, promoting use of bicycle helmets, and more precise and comprehensive documentation of bicycle crashes in health care units.
芬兰国家交通 2022-2026 年安全战略旨在将 2020 年至 2030 年期间的道路死亡人数和重伤人数减少一半。该战略指出,需要更好地了解自行车事故信息,以促进安全。本研究的目的是描述重伤自行车骑手的人口统计学特征、受伤特征、酒精参与情况和头盔使用情况,并比较单自行车事故(单独摔倒或撞到固定物体)和碰撞。
我们从赫尔辛基创伤登记处(HTR)确定了 2006 年至 2021 年期间所有的自行车事故。分析的变量包括基本患者人口统计学特征、简明损伤评分(AIS)代码、AIS 3+损伤、受伤身体部位、患者损伤严重程度评分(ISS)和新损伤严重程度评分(NISS)、30 天院内死亡率、重症监护病房住院时间、损伤机制、受伤自行车骑手的酒精使用情况和头盔使用情况。
在 HTR 中,325 名严重(NISS>15)自行车损伤患者中,53.5%为单自行车事故损伤,46.5%为与移动物体碰撞损伤。大多数(71.4%)患者为男性,所有患者的平均年龄为 54.1 岁(标准差 16.7)。在 23.1%的病例中检测到酒精,单自行车事故(32.8%)中比碰撞(11.9%)中更常见。不到三分之一(29.2%)的自行车骑手戴头盔;戴头盔的自行车骑手的严重(AIS 3+)头部损伤比不戴头盔的少。与单自行车事故相比,与碰撞相关的自行车事故中,ISS 和 NISS 评分更高。与单自行车事故相比,严重(AIS 3+)四肢或骨盆带损伤在碰撞中更常见。
在重伤自行车骑手,单自行车事故更为常见;与碰撞相比,单自行车事故中更常检测到酒精。与单自行车事故相比,碰撞造成的整体损伤更为严重。戴头盔的自行车骑手的 AIS 3+头部损伤比不戴头盔的少。应重点关注预防与酒精有关的自行车事故,促进自行车头盔的使用,并在医疗保健单位更准确和全面地记录自行车事故。