On the fatal crash experience of older drivers.

Author(s)
Kent, R. Henary, B. & Matsuoka, F.
Year
Abstract

This study describes the fatal crash experiences of older drivers. Data from two U.S. databases (NASS-CDS and FARS) were used. Several crash, vehicle, and occupant characteristics were compared across age groups, including vehicle type, crash direction (PDOF), severity (delta-V), and injured body region. A sub-set of 97 fatally injured drivers was chosen for a detailed case study. The mean travel speed, delta-V, and airbag deployment rate decreased significantly with age (p<0.001 unless noted). Mortality rate increased significantly with age. Older drivers killed were significantly more likely to die of a chest injury (47.3% vs. 24.0% in youngest group) and less likely to die of a head injury (22.0% vs. 47.1% in youngest group). Older drivers were more likely to die at a date after the crash date (¡°delayed death¡±), as were males (p=0.003). A 16-year-old driver had a 10.8%- 12.0% probability of delayed death, while a 75-year-old had a 20.7%-22.7% probability. For those having a delayed death, the length of the delay increased significantly with age (2.9 days for age 16 vs. 7.9 for age 75). A subjective assessment of the case files indicated that frailty or a pre-existing health condition played a role in 4.3% of the younger drivers' deaths, but 50.0% of the older group. (Author/publisher)

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Publication

Library number
20051611 y ST (In: ST 20051611 S)
Source

In: Proceedings of the 49th Annual Conference of the Association for the Advancement of Automotive Medicine AAAM, Hyatt Regency Cambridge, Boston, Massachusetts, September 12-14, 2005, p. 371-391, 16 ref.

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