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Inside Out reveals dangers of riding


The terrible toll of deaths and serious injuries in riding accidents has been revealed for the first time in a Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Yorkshire investigation.

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Riding is booming but so are the number of casualties - Yorkshire and Lincolnshire's two air ambulances have seen an increase of 65% in accidents over the past five years.

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A report presented by TV vet and keen rider Emma Milne on Inside Out (Friday 23 March, 7.30pm, Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ One Yorkshire & Lincolnshire) reveals that, this year alone, flying paramedics have been scrambled to around 150 incidents - three a week.

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And, for them, riding has now overtaken motorcycling as the biggest cause of rural casualties.

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Emma said: "I've been riding since I was seven ... but it wasn't until I looked at the statistics and talked to victims and their families that I realised how high the stakes are.

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"We cheerfully teach our kids to ride and buy them ponies. Yet many parents wouldn't dream of encouraging them to take up motorcycling."

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And Inside Out reveals a report by a leading spinal consultant which concluded that riding a horse is 20 times more dangerous than riding a motorbike.

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While you can expect to have a serious motorbike accident once in every 7,000 hours, a serious riding accident happens once in every 350 hours.

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Sally Wilson, from Louth in Lincolnshire, was one of the casualties. She is now paralysed and will spend the rest of her life in a wheelchair.

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"I was wearing a hard hat and back protector, but I fell on concrete on my head, and they don't make anything that protects your neck," she said.

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Some of the casualties are children. At the age of 13, Lucy Caley, from Meaux, near Beverley, was an experienced rider who enjoyed great success in competitions.

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She came off in a paddock near her home and died almost immediately of internal injuries after her horse fell on her.

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Her mother Susan said: "It wasn't the horse's fault - and Lucy had come off a thousand times in her life. It was one of those freak flukes - nothing could have been done to prevent it."

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But Anne Pickles of Truewell Hall Riding School, near Keighley, told Inside Out that some children are not even being taught the basics of riding.

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"We get people who've been riding for three or four years and they don't even know how to mount a horse properly, which is one of the first safety lessons that should be taught," she said.

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Inside Out reveals research carried out by the British Journal of Sports Medicine points out that most accidents actually occur among the most experienced riders.

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Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Leeds Press Office

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Category: Yorks & N.Midlands TV; E.Yorks & Lincs TV
Date: 23.03.2007
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