PREDICTING INJURY RISK WITH "NEW CAR ASSESSMENT PROGRAM" CRASHWORTHINESS RATINGS

Author(s)
JONES, IS INSURANCE INST HIGHW SAFETY, WASHINGTON, USA WHITFIELD, RA QUALITY CONTROL SYSTEMS, ARLINGTON, USA
Year
Abstract

The relationship between crashworthiness ratings produced by thenational highway traffic safety administration's (nhtsa's) new car assessment program (ncap) and the risk of incapacitating injury or death for drivers who are involved in single-car, fixed-object, frontal collisions was examined. The results are based on 6, 405 such crashes from the motor vehicle traffic accident file of the texas department of highways and public transportation. The risk of injury was modeled using logistic regression taking into account the ncap test results for each individual model of car and the intervening effects of car mass, age of the driver, restraint use, and crash severity. Three measures of anthropometric dummy response, head injury criterion (hic), chest deceleration (cd), and femur load were used to indicate vehicle crash test performance. The results show that there is a significant relationship between the results of the ncap tests and the risk of serious injury or death in actual single-car frontal accidents. In terms of overall injury, chest deceleration was a better predictor than the head injury criterion. For restrained drivers, crash severity, driver age, and chest deceleration were significant parameters for predicting risk of serious injury or death; the risk of injury decreased as chest deceleration decreased. The results were similar for unrestrained drivers although vehicle mass and femur loadwere also signficant factors in the model. The risk of overall injury decreased as chest deceleration decreased but appeared to decrease as femur load increased. (A).

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Publication

Library number
I 818215 IRRD 8901
Source

ACCIDENT ANALYSIS AND PREVENTION 1988 /12 E20 6 PAG:411-9 T10

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