Fatality reduction by automatic occupant protection in the United States.

Author(s)
Kahane, C.J.
Year
Abstract

Automatic occupant protection, state belt laws, and greater voluntary belt use amount to a `winning combination' that saves lives. Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard (FMVSS) 208, as amended on July 17, 1984, combined a nationwide effort to increase belt use through state belt laws, enforcement and education, and a requirement that automatic occupant protection, such as air bags or automatic belts, be phased into passenger cars and light trucks. The effectiveness of automatic occupant protection is measured by statistical analysis of fatal crashes involving model year 1985-93 passenger cars, based on Fatal Accident Reporting System (FARS) data from 1986 through mid 1993. Fatality risk of occupants in cars Fatality risk of occupants in cars equipped with air bags plus manual belts (at 1993 use rates) is 23 percent lower than in "baseline" cars with manual belts at 1983 use rates. In similar comparisons, the fatality reductions for the four types of automatic belts range from 11 to 19 percent. All reductions are statistically significant. In the 1993 model-year mix of cars with air bags or automatic belts, at 1993 belt use rates, the average fatality risk is 20 percent lower than for baseline, manual-belt cars at 1983 use rates. (A)

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Publication

Library number
C 9274 (In: C 9195 [electronic version only]) /81 /84 /91 / IRRD 894927
Source

In: Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Technical Conference on Enhanced Safety of Vehicles ESV, Munich, Germany, May 23-26, 1994, Volume 1, Paper 94-s5-o-08, p. 846-855, 15 ref.

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