Differential risk of injury in child occupants by passenger car classification.

Author(s)
Kallan, M.J. Durbin, D.R. Elliott, M.R. Menon, R.A. & Winston, F.K.
Year
Abstract

In the United States, passenger cars are the most common passenger vehicle, yet they vary widely in size and crashworthiness. Using data collected from a population-based sample of crashes in State Farm-insured vehicles, the authors quantified the risk of injury to child occupants by passenger car size and classification. Injury risk is predicted by vehicle weight; however, there is an increased risk in both Large vs. Luxury and Sports vs. Small cars, despite similar average vehicle weights in both comparisons. Parents who are purchasing passenger cars should strongly consider the size of the vehicle and its crashworthiness.

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Publication

Library number
C 31290 (In: C 31267 CD-ROM) /91 / ITRD E827378
Source

In: Proceedings of the 47th Annual Conference of the Association for the Advancement of Automotive Medicine AAAM, Lisbon, Portugal, September 22-24, 2003, p. 329-341, 18 ref.

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