There's a very good article in the current issue of RoadRUNNER magazine that talks about this subject. It's an interview with a surgeon who rebuilds faces. He is also a Harley rider. The upshot is that he strongly advocates wearing a helmet. He goes so far as to say that he has never had a patient who was wearing a full-face helmet at the time of the crash. The helmet did its job. I don't like full-face helmets because it gets so hot here in Texas but that statement sure made me stop and think.
I'm also going to throw in a personal thought here. I worked the streets as a paramedic for 26 years. I saw a lot of trauma and the aftermath of trauma. By aftermath I mean what happens to victims and families in the days, weeks, months, and sometimes years after the initial incident. I've read a lot of posts here about how wearing a helmet should be a matter of choice. Maybe it should be. But not wearing a helmet is a very selfish choice unless you don't have anyone who cares about you. Sure, we're bikers. We are free and independent. We are wild and love taking risks. Well, Brother, that sounds real good and would make a great epitaph on a tombstone but what about the people who are affected by what we do? I've been there when the ER doc had to tell a mother, wife, or girlfriend that their loved one is gone. I worked one motorcycle accident where the biker and his girlfriend went down on some gravel in a curve. According to witnesses, the bike was going about 20 mph. Neither person was wearing a helmet. He lived. She didn't because of head trauma. He has to live with that memory every day of his life. I've seen families financially ruined because of huge medical bills caused by motorcycle accidents. Head and/or spinal injured patients can be the worst because the bills go on for years. These patients are often bed-confined and require near-constant care. Not much fun in that for anyone.
My point here is that there is a difference between being free and independent and taking unnecessary risks. I skydived in my younger years. Jumping was a calculated risk and one heck of a lot of fun. But you never saw me jump without a reserve chute even though I never had my primary fail to open. A helmet is a lot like that reserve chute, you probably don't need it but when you do...
Storm