Gender and age influence on fatality risk from the same physical impact determined using two-car crashes.

Author(s)
Evans, L. & Gerrish, P.H.
Year
Abstract

Studies using the double-pair-comparison method found that fatality risk from the same physical impact is (28 ± 3)% greater for females than for males, and increases with age after age 20 at compound annual rates of (2.52 ± 0.08)% for males and (2.16 ± 0.10)% for females. The purpose ot the present study is to investigate fatality risk from the same physical impact versus gender and age using a different method and data distinct from those in the other studies. Female to male fatality risk was estimated using two-car crashes in which the gender of the two drivers differed. Fatality risk from the same impact is found to be (22 ± 9)% greater for females than for males, and to increase annually after age 20 by (2.86 ± 0.32)% for males and (2.66 ± 0.37)% for females. The relatively close quantitative agreement between the present and double-pair-comparison estimates increases confidence in the validity of double-pair-comparison methods and the present method. (A)

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Publication

Library number
20020490 f ST (In: ST 20020490 [electronic version only])
Source

In: Vehicle aggressivity and compatibility in automotive crashes 2001 : papers presented at the 2001 SAE International Congress, Detroit, Michigan, USA, March 5-8, 2001, SAE Technical Paper 2000-01-1174, p. 47-52, 31 ref.

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