Billion-dollar toll from injuries, primarily to older
people and men
University of California - San Francisco
Fortunately for Charlestown, hardly anyone uses our $300,000 bike path, Faith's Folly, thus reducing our liability exposure. |
Over a 17-year period, medical costs of bicycle injuries to
adults in the United States, both fatal and non-fatal, amounted to $237
billion, the study found. In 2013 alone, total costs from bicycle accidents
exceeded $24.4 billion, the researchers reported.
That is approximately double the medical and other various costs
involved for all occupational illnesses over the same time period.
There were 3.8 million non-fatal adult bicycle injuries and nearly 9,839 deaths that were reported during the study period from 1997 to 2013. Men accounted for three-quarters of the total costs.
The study will be published June 1, 2017, in the journal Injury
Prevention.
"The costs of bicycle injuries have risen steadily since
1997, with a significant increase in emergency department visits and hospital
admissions, especially with older men," said first author Thomas W.
Gaither, a UCSF medical student.
"In the past, many bicycle accidents stemmed from
non-street incidents. But now, street crashes with motor vehicles represent a
greater proportion of the total costs. These crashes, which primarily occur
with motor vehicles, increase the velocity of the crash impact and, as a
result, the severity of the injury."
Cycling has many well-documented health benefits, including
improved cardiovascular function and decreased all-cause mortality. But along
with the positive effects of riding, there are risks due to serious and
sometimes life-threatening injuries, many involving accidents to riders 45 and
older.
Previous research by the investigative team has shown that over
the last 15 years in the U.S., the incidence of hospital admissions due to bike
crashes increased by 120 percent.
Reflecting the major societal implications, the new study
estimated total annual costs -- including medical costs, work losses and
quality of life losses -- associated with non-fatal and fatal bicycle injuries
to adults. Pediatric injuries were not included.
The study analyzed non-fatal incidence data from the National
Electronic Injury Surveillance System with cost estimates from the Consumer
Product Safety Commission's Injury Cost Model, and 1999-2013 fatal incidence
data from the National Vital Statistics System. The research excluded mopeds
and cycles that do not have two wheels.
The investigators calculated costs from a variety of factors,
including hospital charges, readmissions, rehabilitation, nursing home stays,
emergency transport, visits to the emergency department, days lost, cost of
lost work, lifetime productivity lost and lost quality of life.
Among the key findings:
- The toll for bicycle injuries during the study period was $209 billion for non-fatal accidents and $28 billion for fatal injuries
- Annual costs over the study period increased by 137 percent for non-fatal injuries and 23 percent for fatal injuries
- There were approximately 6,500 more adult cycling injuries annually
- Medical costs increased by 137 percent for non-fatal bike crashes
- Bicycling deaths increased by an average of 19 cases a year
- Older riders accounted for a great proportion of total costs through time and a larger share of inpatient admission costs
In 2013, nearly 54 percent of the total costs of bicycle
accidents were due to riders 45 and older, up from 26 percent in 1997, the
researchers reported.
Along with the fact that older adults are biking more and being
more severely hurt, the rising severity of injuries may be due to changes in
motor vehicle traffic, more commuting by bicycle and changes in vehicle design,
reported the researchers.
"While the health benefits of cycling far outweigh the
health risks, our results demonstrate the scope of the financial impact of
cycling injuries," said senior author Benjamin N. Breyer, MD, a UCSF
Health urologist. "To me, it clearly makes a strong case for investment in
safer cycling infrastructure.
"Many of these injuries are preventable with safer
roads," said Breyer, an associate professor of urology at UCSF and chief
of urology at UCSF partner hospital Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital
and Trauma Center.
"We can learn lessons from the cycling environment in some
European cities, where they have more riders and fewer accidents per rider. As
our cities become more dense and we look for ways to promote active commuting
to benefit health and environment, we need to invest long term into our
bicycling infrastructure."