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Helmets

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The Metropolitan Manila Development Authority seems to have moved from the crackdown on smoking in public places to going after motorcycle drivers without helmets.  Public reaction has been cynical, ranging from predictions of another “here today, gone tomorrow” campaign (as with the public smoking) to suspicions that the apprehensions end up as extortions, with the hapless drivers bribing their way out of the predicament.

While people’s perceptions are to some extent based on reality, all this cynicism prevents us from recognizing that we do need to do something about the many public health hazards Filipinos face. I am going to concentrate on the issue of helmets. The bottom line is that helmets do protect people from head injuries which can cause serious lifelong disability, or death.

The last Philippine Health Statistics yearbook, which is a compilation of national data, reports a total of 19,800 deaths from accidents (I excluded homicides and murders which, for some strange reason, are counted under accidents). Of these 19,800  deaths, one-third or 6,100 were transport-related.

There is no breakdown of how many of these fatal accidents involved motorcycles, but we do have more recent information in the form of the “National Electronic Injury Surveillance Fact Sheet,” issued every quarter by the Department of Health and available on its website. The numbers in each report will change but the pattern is clear: transport-related injuries always top the list, with motorcycles accounting for the majority of injuries in this category.  Tricycles come in second, which shouldn’t be surprising since these are really motorcycles with an added passenger cab.  In addition, each quarterly DOH report notes that only a tiny percentage of the injured (and dead) motorcyclists were using helmets at the time of the accident.

Reducing risks

Do helmets help reduce risks? Filipinos who have been to Vietnam know that it is a nation of motorcycles, and chaotic ones at that. More than 90 percent of the country’s vehicles are motorcycles. In December 2007, a law requiring helmets for motorcycle drivers and passengers was passed. I was there shortly after the law was passed and was impressed at how rapidly motorcyclists complied, thanks to very strict enforcement.

At the time the law was passed, an average of 40 people were being killed in motorcycle accidents every day (you read that right: every day). In the first year after the law was passed, injuries and deaths drastically dropped, and it was estimated that some 1,500 lives were saved.

Our Motorcycle Helmet Law or RA 10054, sponsored by Sen. Ramon Revilla Jr., was passed and signed into law in March 2010. It requires all motorcycle riders, including drivers and back riders (I suspect this is a Filipino-English word, used to refer to someone riding behind the driver), to wear standard protective motorcycle helmets at all times while riding a motorcycle. This applies to any type of road and highway driving.

There are stiff penalties for not wearing helmets: a fine of P1,500 for the first offense, P3,000 for the second offense, P5,000 for the third offense, and P10,000 plus confiscation of the driver’s license for the fourth and succeeding offenses.

Other laws

Let me take a slight detour here for entertainment.  Earlier, in 2007, the Metro Manila Council (MMC) passed a resolution to implement a “Dual Motorcycle and Helmet License Plate Numbers Policy,” requiring motorcyclists to use helmets with their vehicles’ license plate numbers appearing on the helmets as water-proof stickers. The stickers were supposed to be placed on both sides of the headgear and had to be readable from a distance of 25 meters.

The purpose of this policy was to allow victims of motorcycle snatchers to identify the modern-day road robbers so that law enforcers could go after them.

I didn’t know about this resolution until I was researching for today’s column and reacted with incredulity. I checked if the website might not have been put up by a prankster, but it turns out that the MMC resolution was very real.  Not only that, it was supplemented by another resolution, numbered 07-07, called the “No Face Shield” policy, requiring that the back driver (still another Filipino-English term, probably the same as the back rider) use a helmet “where the shield for the face is tilted upward so that the face of the back driver would be revealed and identifiable by the public.”

I don’t know if the resolutions are being enforced or if they are even enforceable, not being ordinances. I did find several articles, and even a video showing motorcyclists in a noisy protest rally against the MMC resolution.

We don’t need more of these crazy MMC resolutions, but we definitely need to implement the Helmet Law.  The exemption of tricycles needs to be reviewed, using an analysis of accident statistics as a guide for policy.

We should also be looking into the possibility of requiring helmets for cyclists. There is no international consensus around this issue, with some people fearing that such a requirement would discourage even more people from using bicycles, but from a safety angle, it looks like helmets on cyclists can also help to reduce injuries and deaths.

It is also important to educate the public about the proper helmets to use. The helmets must conform to Department of Trade and Industry standards. Note, too, that children should not use adult helmets because these are too heavy, even if they seem to fit on their heads.

Watch the Filipino newscasts and you will find that every night, they report on vehicular accidents, including motorcycles. The reports always have grisly footage, the cadavers and bodies blocked out but blood often still visible.  I have watched these newscasts while in urban poor communities and people will pause, and shake their heads, sometimes commenting, “Terrible,” but I don’t think there’s any long-term effect in the sense of getting people to be more conscious of the need for motorcycle safety. In fact, I wonder if at times these news reports embolden the men to become reckless as a display of masculinity.

Perhaps our news networks shouldn’t just feature footage of the accidents but also interview motorcyclists who didn’t use helmets and survived accidents, but must now live with the terrible costs of disabilities such as paralysis.

I have noticed, too, that more and more motorcycle drivers do use helmets, but it is rare to find MMDA enforcers using helmets while on motorcycles. We are quick to make laws, quick to punish people for violating the laws, but terrible at getting law enforcers to follow the law.

* * *

Email: mtan@inquirer.com.ph


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Tags: featured columns , helmet law , MMDA , motorcycle drivers , opinion

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  • Anonymous

    HAR! HAR! HAR!  ARe you living in the Philippines or are you in America?  HAR! HAR! HAR!  

    Lookit, yo!  I’D RATHER SMOKE THAN STAND ALONG EDSA WAITING FOR BUS FOR ANOTHER MINUTE !  HAR! HAR! HAR! HAR! HAR!

    Aaaaah, you are a Filipino.  A Filipino don’t have observation skills.  Observation skills is needed on mathematics and science  which Filipinos are not fond of EXCEPT TSISMIS.  

    HAR! HAR! HAR! HAR!

    • Anonymous

      Excuse me MarianoRenatoPacifico but I couldn’t squeeze any juice from you  except these monosylabic “HAR HAR HAR” . Second, your grammar is terrible. You say, “a Filipino don’t have observation skills: You mean ” a Filipino DOESN’T have observation skills. Again you wrote “observation skills is needed on math..” Say observation skills ARE needed IN…”  BTW, Saan ka ba nag-aral sa college? Beside you misused “Observation skills” when you could have simply used the adjective “Filipinos are not OBSERVANT”

      • Anonymous

        HAR! HAR! HAR!  The verb not agreeing with the subject is a planted mine, so are double-tensed into action verb !  HAR! HAR! HAR!

        @pedronimo:disqus I intentionally do that to weed out people who focus more on englsichtze than CONTENT !  IT IS THE MESSAGE, DUDE !  NOT ENGLSICHTZES !  HAR! HAR! HAR!

        I GOTCHA …. FILIIPNOS ARE SO STUCK-UP ON PERFPEFECKT ENGLISCHTZES AND ESPELLINGS !  DEPSITE THEIR belief that they are goot in englsichtzes, Philippines cannot run on englsichtzes !  HAR! HAR! HAR!  My ginamus and tilapia vendor speak goot englsichtzes than you ARE !  HAR! HAR! HAR! HAR!

        GALING ENGLISCHTZES KUH !

  • Anonymous

    I saw one time, a policeman riding his bike with her sexy gf or wife or lover, wearing no helmet. They can feel the heat, so wearing helmet is not advisable in a tropical country like Philippines.

    • angela a

      seryoso ba to? mainitan o mamatay? pili ka

  • Anonymous

    Bike riders in the Philippine really must wear helmets.

    They are in fact always on the race, trying to catch up the first place.

    If you are travelling at a low speed, on the end side of the road, that is safer. But if you are in a racing mood, you really need to wear helmet and other riders gear.

    Filipino bikers are really bad racers. They die on the road without ever winning a race.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_T7DJBD3ZOZFENRNEGSLBG3525Y julio

    The mandatory wearing of helmet for motorcycle drivers and pillion riders (term for back riders) is a good law but sad to say is another dead-letter law more observed in breach. Here in Tarlac City I seldom see authorities apprehending motorcyclists without helmet or even if they have don’t wear it. It’s either slung at their elbows or handlebar. And the worst of all is a motorcycle driven by man with his wife and two children sandwich between them. It’s about them this law is enforced at all times.

  • Anonymous

    Bukod sa pagsusuot ng helmet, try naman natin ang pagiging masunurin sa batas trapiko, para dun, mas malessen ang aksidente, diba? 

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Sehr-Cayabyab/1834831314 Sehr Cayabyab

    A law should be enacted to limit or completely ban the importation of motorbikes since these have become nuisance on the road, before we become another Vietnam where motorbikes buzz like bees. At the same time, they should be banned from plying major roads and should be allowed in internal roads or limit them to subdivisions and the like. We have heard lawmakers reporting and complaining about these motorbikes especially those criminals riding in tandem, but nobody is lifting a finger to ban them totally on the streets. 

  • Anonymous

    Considering the huge number of motorcycles especially on busy roads at any given hour, it is about time these ubiquitous vehicles be given a lane especially for them. As it is these motorcyclists keep swerving lanes which is annoying to motorists and dangerous to the motorcyclists themselves. Motorcyle lanes will help diminish their collisions with larger vehicles like trucks and buses



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