Case comparisons of restrained and non-restrained occupants and related injury patterns. Paper presented at the International Automotive Engineering Congress, Detroit Michigan, January, 13-17 1969.

Author(s)
Siegel, A.W. W.T. van Wagoner & A.M. Nahum.
Year
Abstract

Restraining devices continue to be the most effective means of lessening injuries in automobile collisions. Evidence from the Trauma Research Group's case files illustrates how injury is avoided or minimized by use of lap, shoulder, and diagonal seat belts in several types of crashes, under various angles of impact. Prevention of fatal ejection, the improved chances a restrained driver has of retaining control of his car, and the attenuation of interior collision forces, such as result in jackknifing, are topics discussed, as well as the contribution of major automobile design improvements.

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Publication

Library number
A 9576 fo IRRD 49545
Source

New York, Society of Automotive Engineers SAE, 1969, 17 p.; SAE publication No. 690245

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.