AI Article Synopsis

  • The paper analyzes road injury issues in France during the 2010s, focusing on the frequency and severity of injuries among car occupants, and how these impact vehicle safety.
  • A time series analysis reveals a significant decline in fatalities and serious injuries for car occupants compared to other transportation modes, with -58% fatalities and -64% hospitalized cases for cars.
  • The study indicates that while common injuries affect the head and torso, the majority of car occupants (over 66%) sustain no injuries, and newer cars with seat belts show a nearly 50% reduction in severe injuries compared to older models.

Article Abstract

The objective of the paper is to give an overview of the road injuries issues in France in the 2010's by determining the frequency and the severity of injuries sustained by car occupants, and to infer the implications in terms of vehicule safety. Three types of analysis are conducted. First, we present a time series analysis at a macro statistical level showing a dramatic decrease of injured and fatally injured occupants in passenger cars compared to other modes of road transport. Secondly, we propose a descriptive statistical analysis of the injuries (frequency and severity) sustained by car occupants, by body regions, using the AIS. Finally we propose some insights into the effectiveness of some safety features. French National crash census (BAAC) is used for a general overview of injury frequencies and raw severity scores (fatal, hospitalized, slighty injured) in car crashes. In-depth crash investigations data are used to specify the body regions and the severity of the injuries sustained by car occupants. Data show that car occupants mortality and morbidity decreased more over the last decade than other road modes: -58 % fatalities and -64 % hospitalized (compared to -39% and -55% for pedestrians, and -21% and -44% for motorcyclists for example). In crashes for which at least one person has been injured, 19 % of occupants are uninjured, 49 % of occupants sustain MAIS 1 injuries, 15 % MAIS2, 8% MAIS 3, and 9 % MAIS 4+. Regardless of seat belt use, the body regions most often injured are head, upper and lower extremities and thorax. However, at least two third up to 92% of involved persons sustain no injury at each of these body regions. The frequency of severe injuries is low, often less than 10 % and concern head and thorax mainly. Finally, the frequency and severity of injuries decrease for belted occupants in newer cars compared to older cars, whatever body regions. The frequency of severe injuries decreased by almost 50 % in these newer cars.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3503418PMC

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

car occupants
20
body regions
20
frequency severity
16
severity injuries
16
sustained car
16
injuries sustained
12
injuries
9
occupants
9
implications terms
8
injured occupants
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!