In a city with all-ages helmet legislation, helmet use is high but differs across infrastructure types and cyclist characteristics. Bike share systems could increase helmet use by providing complementary helmets coupled with supportive measures.
There is no standard naming convention for cycling infrastructure across cities. Our aim was to develop a common nomenclature for cycling infrastructure in Canada, relevant to the context of public health practice. We drew on transportation engineering design guides and public health guidance to develop a bicycle facility classification system: the Canadian Bikeway Comfort and Safety (Can-BICS) classification system, a three-tiered classification scheme that groups five bicycle facilities based on safety performance and user comfort. Adopting consistent nomenclature as per the Can-BICS system will support regional and national surveillance efforts in public health, planning and sustainability.
Falls and single bicycle incidents with infrastructure, roads, and railroads are relatively frequent incidents and lead to injury.• Crowdsourced data can supplement official reports to improve bicycling safety analysis.• Narrative and contextual details help inform interventions that can reduce injury for bicyclists.Bicycling-related injury data are difficult to obtain from official reports, which capture only about 20% of crashes and often lack coordinates, injury outcomes, and narratives needed for understanding where and why incidents occurred. Crowdsourced data on bicycling safety provides new opportunities for the study of bicycling injury and risk. Our goal was to quantify factors that influence the spatial variation in unsafe bicycling across a city, based on self-reports of bicycling incidents. To meet this goal, we leveraged BikeMaps.org, a global tool for reporting bicycling safety incidents, drawing on data from Metro Vancouver. We summarized incident conditions that led to injury, developed a model to identify predictors of injury using random forest regression, and mapped bicycling incident hot spots. Our results
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