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What's new
Age, gender major factors in severity of auto-accident
injuries |
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Understanding the differences among drivers in different gender and age categories is crucial to preventing serious injuries, said researchers in a new study showing stark statistical differences in traffic-accident injuries depending on the gender and age of drivers. The new findings are especially important because the number of drivers 65 and older is expected to double by 2030 in the United States to 70 million, said Fred Mannering, a professor of civil engineering at Purdue University and the study's co-author. National statistics show that fatalities rose by 7 percent for drivers 75 and older from 1981 to 2000, remained steady for drivers from 65-74, but dropped for younger drivers. It is reasonably well known that age and gender have an effect on the likelihood of an accident, but the influence that age and gender have on driver injuries once an accident has occurred is not well understood. The Purdue researchers found statistically significant differences in the severity of injuries suffered in accidents involving men and women drivers and drivers within three age groups: young drivers, 16-24; middle-aged drivers, 25-64; and older drivers, 65 and above. Because the factors that affect how severely you are going to be injured vary depending on your age and gender, a better understanding of age and gender differences can lead to improvements in vehicle and highway design to minimize driver injury severity. What is clear is that safety research and policy must begin to seriously
address gender- and age-related matters because there are compelling
differences and considerable potential to improve safety if these
differences are properly addressed.
"We can only speculate as to why these differences exist," Mannering said.
Possibilities include differences in reaction time and physical differences
relating to height, weight and body structure and vehicle design attributes
that affect drivers differently. Another possibility is that vehicle safety
systems, such as safety belts and airbags, may be more effective for some
age and gender categories than for others. For the most part, if you are drunk and hit a utility pole at 70 mph, you
will have the same injury probabilities as if you are sober and hit a
utility pole at 70 mph. On the other hand, whether you would have been going
70 mph and hit the utility pole if you were sober is another question - one
that was not address in this
research because
statistical models used, were conditioned on the
accident having occurred. Bibliography:
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