Influence of obesity on mortality of drivers in severe motor vehicle crashes

Author(s)
Jehle, D.; Gemme, S.; Jehle, C.
Year

The purpose of the study was to investigate the relationship between obesity and mortality of drivers in severe motor vehicle crashes involving at least one fatality. Fatalities were selected from 155 584 drivers included in the 2000-2005 Fatality Analysis Reporting System. Drivers were stratified by body mass index, confounders were adjusted for, and multiple logistic regression was used to determine the odds ratio (OR) of death in each body mass index class compared with normal weight.
Main findings showed that the adjusted risk of death from lowest to highest, reported as the OR of death compared with normal weight with 95% confidence intervals, was as follows: (1) overweight (OR, 0.952; 0.911-0.995; P = .0293), (2) slightly obese (OR, 0.996; 0.966-1.026; P = .7758), (3) normal weight, (4) underweight (OR, 1.115; 1.035-1.201; P = .0043), (5) moderately obese (OR, 1.212; 1.128-1.302; P < .0001), and (6) morbidly obese (OR, 1.559; 1.402-1.734; P < .0001).
The study showed that there was an increased risk of death for moderately obese, morbidly obese, and underweight drivers and a decreased risk in overweight drivers.

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Pages
191-195
Published in
American Journal of Emergency Medicine
30 (1)
Library number
20220237 ST [electronic version only]

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