Profpointy
Legendary Member
And yet if you look at medical research, doctors always seem to think that helmets reduce head and facial injuries even if helmets are only styrofoam and plastic.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7025438/
At the risk of generalising, the medical profession are often pretty innumerate, despite the fact that assessing the efficacy of treatment is highly dependant on a deep understanding of statistics. It isn't entirely surprising as I suspect relatively few medics have even done A level maths. One notorious and tragic example was when a cot-death "expert" testimony in a murder trial led to the distraught mother being imprisoned for murder. She was later exonerated but the expert doctor's understanding of stats was worse than you'd expect of someone doing their O-levels.
Granted a minority of doctors, particularly researchers or epidemiologists would have learnt enough to get by with stats, but it's (clearly) far from true for the majority. There are a lot of pitfalls with stats, so merely being very intelligent and knowledgable about medicine generally is far from enough to be a competent statistician.
Whilst I've not (yet) followed your link, every single paper supporting helmets that I've read so far has been flawed; in many cases not just subtle nuances but ridiculous things. For some it looks like they are out and out mendatious, as the "errors" looks as if they are contrived to get the desired answer.
I'm not sure doctors per se have any particular expertise in the matter. If anything someone with a numerate background, ideally statistics, or failing that, an engineer, physical scientist or even an economist might be far better placed to look into this.