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Canadian Journal of Public Health = Revue Canadienne de Santé Publique logoLink to Canadian Journal of Public Health = Revue Canadienne de Santé Publique
. 2012 Nov 1;103(Suppl 3):S42–S47. doi: 10.1007/BF03403834

Safe Cycling: How Do Risk Perceptions Compare With Observed Risk?

Meghan Winters 18,, Shelina Babul 28, H J E H (Jack) Becker 38, Jeffrey R Brubacher 48, Mary Chipman 58, Peter Cripton 68, Michael D Cusimano 78, Steven M Friedman 88, M Anne Harris 98, Garth Hunte 48, Melody Monro 108, Conor C O Reynolds 118, Hui Shen 108, Kay Teschke 108
PMCID: PMC6974276  PMID: 23618088

Abstract

Objective

Safety concerns deter cycling. The Bicyclists’ Injuries and the Cycling Environment (BICE) study quantified the injury risk associated with 14 route types, from off-road paths to major streets. However, when it comes to injury risk, there may be discordance between empirical evidence and perceptions. If so, even if protective infrastructure is built people may not feel safe enough to cycle. This paper reports on the relationship between perceived and observed injury risk.

Methods

The BICE study is a case-crossover study that recruited 690 injured adult cyclists who visited emergency departments in Toronto and Vancouver. Observed risk was calculated by comparing route types at the injury sites with those at randomly selected control sites along the same route. The perceived risk was the mean response of study participants to the question "How safe do you think this site was for cyclists on that trip?", with responses scored from +1 (very safe) to -1 (very dangerous). Perceived risk scores were only calculated for non-injury control sites, to reduce bias by the injury event.

Results

The route type with the greatest perceived risk was major streets with shared lanes and no parked cars (mean score = -0.21, 95% confidence interval [CI]: -0.54–0.11), followed by major streets without bicycle infrastructure (-0.07, CI -0.14–0.00). The safest perceived routes were paved multi-use paths (0.66, CI 0.43–0.89), residential streets (0.44, CI 0.37–0.51), bike paths (0.42, CI 0.25–0.60) and residential streets marked as bike routes with traffic calming (0.41, CI 0.32–0.51). Most route types that were perceived as higher risk were found to be so in our injury study; similarly, most route types perceived as safer were also found to be so. Discrepancies were observed for cycle tracks (perceived as less safe than observed) and for multiuse paths (perceived as safer than observed).

Conclusions

Route choices and decisions to cycle are affected by perceptions of safety, and we found that perceptions usually corresponded with observed safety. However, perceptions about certain separated route types did not align well. Education programs and social media may be ways to ensure that public perceptions of route safety reflect the evidence.

Key terms: Safety, transportation, injury, environmental design

Mots clés: sécurité, transports, traumatismes, conception de l’environnement

Footnotes

Acknowledgements: The study was funded by the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (Institute of Musculoskeletal Health and Arthritis, and Institute of Nutrition, Metabolism and Diabetes)._effrey R. Brubacher is a Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research Scholar. Michael D. Cusimano is funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and the Ontario Neurotrauma Foundation. We thank all the study participants for generously contributing their time. We appreciate the work of study staff (Evan Beaupré, Niki Blakely, Jill Dalton, Vartouhi Jazmaji, Martin Kang, Kevin McCurley, Andrew Thomas), hospital personnel (Barb Boychuk, Jan Buchanan, Doug Chisholm, Nada Elfeki, Kishore Mulpuri) and our collaborators from the city (Peter Stary, David Tomlinson, Barbara Wentworth) and community (Bonnie Fenton, David Hay, Nancy Smith Lea, Fred Sztabinski)

Conflict of Interest: None to declare

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