You missed that "If, say..." at the beginning. I was illustrating a point, not quoting a statistic.
The "If, say..." was the point: you were inventing statistics to bolster your case.
Evidence?
OK, I admit I was just saying what I'd read, and a quick google suggests that the evidence for reduced cycle use is inconclusive. However, I did come across this, which strongly suggests that helmets make no significant difference, since when use shot up dramatically from 43% to 92% in New Zealand following compulsion in the 90s, cyclist head injuries did not decline noticeably, more than they already were.
https://www.cyclehelmets.org/papers/c2034.pdf "In New Zealand, most primaryschool children were already wearing
helmets (Fig 5),[8] but adult %HW increased from 43%-92%.[8 9] If helmet
laws were effective, %HI of adults
should have fallen substantially more
than primary-school children. In fact,
both had similar declining trends (Fig
5), implying that the substantial
increase in adult helmet wearing was of
very little benefit.
In Western Australia, helmet
wearing increased from negligible levels
before 1980 to about 37% just before
the law that increased it to 82%.[10] The
most dominant feature in %HI (Fig 6) is
a declining trend common to all road
users. Such trends appear to be
widespread, e.g. the almost identical
declining trends for cyclists and
pedestrians in the UK[11] and Victoria.[12]
Early analyses created considerable
confusion by ignoring such trends,[13 14] mistakenly assuming increased helmet wearing was the only possible
cause of declining %HI.
In WA, a large proportion of cyclists were injured in bike-only crashes, so there is no reason to believe
that, without the helmet law, %HI of cyclists would have followed the same trend as pedestrians (which
increased from 1990 to 1991 for no apparent reason.) When cyclists’ %HI is compared to that of all road
users, there is little or no evidence of any benefit from the helmet law. "
Oh, and can you now see that the doctor quoted in the NYT was arguing for helmet us, not against it?
Yes, but so what? The statistics are against him.