Twenty percent of children who
were in a car crash where someone died were not buckled in properly or were not
wearing a seat belt at all, a study finds, as were 43 percent of children who
died themselves.
And child fatality rates in deadly car crashes vary widely by
state.
The results add evidence to the argument that state regulations
and public information tactics can affect motor vehicle safety for kids. The
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has noted that,
for example, seat belt use across all age groups is higher in states with more
stringent seat belt enforcement laws.
Overall, traffic fatalities in the U.S. are going up, as we have reported. The
latest study set out to look at what factors affect child deaths in fatal car
accidents, breaking down the data by state and region.
The study authors analyzed data collected in the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration's Fatality Analysis Reporting System between 2010 and 2014. In all, they
identified more than 18,000 children under 15 years old who were involved in
fatal car crashes, 15.9 percent of whom died as a result of the crash.
But some parts of the country
had much worse fatality rates than others. The majority, 52 percent, of
children who were in a fatal car crash lived in the South. And across all
states, 43 percent of children who died were improperly restrained or not
restrained at all, according to Faisal Qureshi, an associate professor of
surgery at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center and an author of
the study.
The study was
published in The Journal of Pediatrics.
The authors write that they hope their findings will help
lawmakers beef up motor vehicle safety regulations. "The significant
state-level variation evident in our findings emphasizes the need for close
collaboration between the injury prevention community and those enacting and
enforcing legislation," says Qureshi.
In fact, he says, there may be "potential for a federal
intervention in the area of child traffic safety."
A 10 percent improvement nationally in the use of appropriate
child restraints in cars, they predict, would decrease the national child crash
fatality rate significantly, cutting it from 0.94 per 100,000 to 0.56 per
100,000.
For years, the federal government has collected data on child traffic safety deaths, and offered information about the importance of seat belts and
car seats. But decisions about traffic safety laws have been largely left to
states.
The CDC does offer risk reduction information, including warnings about not
letting children sit in the front seat, and using appropriate car seats for
babies and children.
The findings also underscore the importance of proper seat belt
use, as opposed to simply using a seat belt at all. The National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration announced last year that seat belt use is at its highest level since 1994.
But this latest analysis points out that, at least for children, if the seat
belt is not correctly fastened across the body, or the child does not have an
appropriate car or booster seat, the result can be deadly.
The researchers also found that states with red light cameras,
which are meant to enforce stoplights, had lower child fatality rates from car
crashes. That finding could be of particular interest to local law enforcement
and public safety officials, since red light camera laws are often instituted
at the municipal level. Past research on
red light cameras has found they decrease the number of dangerous
"right-angle" collisions at intersections.
Source: npr.org
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