EPD IPMBA Public Safety Cycling Practice Test

Session length

1 / 20

In a lateral fall, which action best reduces injury risk?

Extend arms outward

Jump away from the bike

Stand upright and brace with feet

Crouch on the bike and keep both hands on handlebars

In a lateral fall, the goal is to stay low, maintain control of the bike, and protect your head and joints. Crouching on the bike and keeping both hands on the handlebars achieves that by lowering your center of gravity, giving you more stability, and preserving grip so you can steer and balance through the fall. This position also helps you absorb the impact with your body and helmet rather than letting the momentum throw you into awkward, high-risk positions.

Extending the arms outward tends to put the wrists, elbows, and shoulders at greater risk and can throw off balance just when you need stability. Jumping away from the bike breaks contact and can lead to uncontrolled tumbles or colliding with the bike or obstacles. Standing upright and bracing with the feet creates a taller, stiffer posture that exposes you to higher-load impacts and makes it harder to roll with the fall.

So, crouching on the bike and keeping both hands on the handlebars provides the best balance of control, protection, and stability during a lateral fall.

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