Examination of Crash Injury Risk as a Function of Occupant Demographics

Author:

Dalmotas Dainius1,Chouinard Aline1,Comeau Jean-Louis1,German Alan1,Robbins Glenn1,Prasad Priya2

Affiliation:

1. D.J. Dalmotas Consulting, Inc.

2. Prasad Engineering, LLC

Abstract

<div class="section abstract"><div class="htmlview paragraph">The objectives of this study were to provide insights on how injury risk is influenced by occupant demographics such as sex, age, and size; and to quantify differences within the context of commonly-occurring real-world crashes. The analyses were confined to either single-event collisions or collisions that were judged to be well-defined based on the absence of any significant secondary impacts. These analyses, including both logistic regression and descriptive statistics, were conducted using the Crash Investigation Sampling System for calendar years 2017 to 2021. In the case of occupant sex, the findings agree with those of many recent investigations that have attempted to quantify the circumstances in which females show elevated rates of injury relative to their male counterparts given the same level bodily insult. This study, like others, provides evidence of certain female-specific injuries. The most problematic of these are AIS 2+ and AIS 3+ upper-extremity and lower-extremity injuries. These are among the most frequently observed injuries for females, and their incidence is consistently greater than for males. Overall, the odds of females sustaining MAIS 3+ (or fatality) are 4.5% higher than the odds for males, while the odds of females sustaining MAIS 2+ (or fatality) are 33.9% higher than those for males. The analyses highlight the need to carefully control for both the vehicle occupied, and the other involved vehicle, when calculating risk ratios by occupant sex. Female driver preferences in terms of vehicle class/size differ significantly from those of males, with females favoring smaller, lighter vehicles.</div></div>

Publisher

SAE International

Reference23 articles.

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4. Digges , K. and Dalmotas , D. How Gender Preferences for Vehicle Size/Class Influences Fatality Outcomes Proceedings 27th ESV Conference, Paper No. 23-0337 2023

5. Forman , J. , Poplin , G.S. , Shaw , C.G. , McMurry , T.L. et al. Automobile Injury Trends in the Contemporary Fleet: Belted Occupants in Frontal Collisions Traffic Injury Prevention 2019

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