I agree with Dennis and Dom (who is Dom by the way? bit of a stranger around these parts)

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It seems to me that if you are seriously into real competition then you have sold your children to pay for all the proper safety gear and had it fitted, you have done the relevant training or been mentored by someone who knows what they are doing, the car has been scrutineered, plus the events you go in are properly organised and there is medical support readily available.
Conversely you have suddenly realised how much real competition costs after burning through a couple of credit cards and having a car (or cars) that you never get the pleasure of driving because they are always in bits, and then decided that maybe being poor and on foot for the rest of your life isn't worth it.
Making these sorts of decisions can loosely fit under the overall subject of risk management which is not a complicated process, and I hope the various organisations involved in the "HANS" decision have conducted a full and thorough risk assessment, and this is not just a knee-jerk reaction to some recent fatal events.
Safety in motor sport competitions is not something you should pick and choose with, although, as a survivability analogy, when you see people riding motorbikes anywhere with a $400.00 helmet, but wearing shorts, singlet and thongs, you have to wonder if they have really thought about what might happen to them if they did come off.
The same goes for cars doing track work, just having a fire extinguisher and wearing long sleeved shirts and long pants plus a helmet, and then in situations as described by Knightrous getting out amongst 40 or so other cars with drivers who have similar competitive intentions seem to me about as useful in helping you to survive a crash as a pocket in a singlet.
As Dennis and Dom-who

have said its horses for courses, and just wearing a HANS-type device won't help if the other risk treatments like car crashworthiness, driver training, proper safety briefings, and event supervision are also not in place.
My challenge to anyone is how much do they really think about safety before going on track for any reason? Its not just about wearing a HANS device.
Walter