Fatal injuries to restrained passenger car occupants in Canada: Crash modes and kinematics of injury

Passenger car collisions with other vehicles and with fixed objects were studied from a representative sample of fatal and injury-producing collisions collected according to a prescribed sampling plan. This paper describes our analysis of accidents involving restrained passenger car occupants who ar...

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Veröffentlicht in:Accident analysis and prevention 1994-04, Vol.26 (2), p.207-214
Hauptverfasser: Green, R.N., German, A., Nowak, E.S., Dalmotas, D., Stewart, D.E.
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container_end_page 214
container_issue 2
container_start_page 207
container_title Accident analysis and prevention
container_volume 26
creator Green, R.N.
German, A.
Nowak, E.S.
Dalmotas, D.
Stewart, D.E.
description Passenger car collisions with other vehicles and with fixed objects were studied from a representative sample of fatal and injury-producing collisions collected according to a prescribed sampling plan. This paper describes our analysis of accidents involving restrained passenger car occupants who are fatally injured in collisions. Lateral collisions were found to be predominant, and both lateral and frontal collisions were associated with marked intrusion into the occupant compartment, causing direct, severe injuries to the head and chest of these occupants. Multiple severe injuries to more than one body region were common, and 90% of these victims died within one hour of the collision. The seat belt generally offered no protection to these fatally injured occupants. Reducing the incidence of fatal injury to properly restrained passenger car occupants will necessitate diminishing these very severe intrusion forces, especially from heavy trucks and fixed vertical hazards. For vehicle design modifications to be effective, it appears likely that roadway and roadside design and management must be included in the safety equation. Excessive speeds, inadequate traffic control, and unforgiving roadside hazards are playing a major role in the incidence of fatal injuries documented in this study.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/0001-4575(94)90090-6
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source MEDLINE; Access via ScienceDirect (Elsevier)
subjects Abbreviated Injury Scale
Accidents, Traffic - mortality
Accidents, Traffic - prevention & control
Biomechanical Phenomena
Canada - epidemiology
Cause of Death
Hospital Mortality
Humans
Incidence
Population Surveillance
Risk Factors
Sampling Studies
Seat Belts - utilization
Time Factors
Wounds and Injuries - etiology
Wounds and Injuries - mortality
Wounds and Injuries - prevention & control
title Fatal injuries to restrained passenger car occupants in Canada: Crash modes and kinematics of injury
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