All motor vehicle accidents can be devastating, but motorcycle crashes are particularly brutal. About 3,000 motorcyclists die on an annual basis, while many others are severely injured. In 2005, motorcycles only accounted for two percent of registered vehicles, but they were responsible for ten percent of fatalities on US roadways. Furthermore, nearly 75% of motorcycle accidents involved a crash with another vehicle, usually a passenger car. In more than 60% of multiple vehicle accidents, the driver of the other car caused the accident by violating the motorcycle rider's right of way.
Motorcycle accident victims often suffer through life-altering disabilities as a result of a crash. Research gathered by the federal Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) shows that the majority of motorcycle deaths stemmed from head injuries. Amazingly, only 50 percent of these deceased riders had any protective headgear on. The National Highway and Traffic Safety Administration estimates that 37% of these motorcyclists could have been saved if they used a helmet.
Motorcycle accident survivors frequently experience "road rash," or painful scrapes and bruises caused from being thrown to the pavement. If it is an extreme case of road rash, victims may require a skin graft, which can result in substantial scarring. If a motorcyclist is involved in a crash, they are tremendously lucky if the worst injury sustained is road rash because there are much more painful and debilitating injuries. Based on a study conducted by AHRQ, the most severe injuries that riders wearing helmets receive are broken bones. 29 percent of these were leg fractures, while 13 percent consisted of arm fractures. Nonfatal head injuries accounted for 12 percent, and less than 10 percent suffered from a spinal cord or internal injury.
Types of injury
The following list describes the most common motorcycle injuries:
A motorcyclist involved in an accident may initially be in shock due to the extraordinary trauma that they have just encountered. When in shock, the victim may be unaware of the injuries they have sustained. For this reason, the victim should always seek immediate medical attention to determine exactly what is wrong with them. Most likely, an ambulance will arrive at the scene shortly.
Oftentimes, motorcycle injuries are tragic and ultimately result in long-term or even lifetime disabilities that leave them bedridden for months of recovery. Brain and spinal cord injury victims usually call for years of rehabilitation, operations, and costly therapy as they cope with their newfound lifestyles.