Newer cars: much safer

Secondary safety refers to mitigation of injury given that a crash occurs, as distinct from prevention of crashes. Evidence is presented that secondary safety of new cars has been improving substantially in recent years: 1. Single-car crashes, South Australia. The later the year of the car, the smaller is the probability of the driver being killed; 2. Car-car collisions, South Australia. Comparison of the severities of injury to the two drivers in the one collision is useful because speed of the impact is the same for the two drivers. The basic question is, which driver is killed? It is shown that it is much more likely to be the driver of the older car; 3. Car-car collisions, New South Wales. The finding was replicated with NSW data. In this case, the sample size was sufficient to include the mass ratio of the cars as a covariate. In each analysis, allowance was made for some covariates. The interpretation of these results is that recent cars genuinely have appreciably better secondary safety than older ones. Possible reasons are discussed. The results are from a time period starting several years ago and cars are about a decade old on average. Thus it is not possible to be sure an improvement is continuing in new cars now: the data is not yet available. The results are nevertheless relevant to the current and future road safety situation. As older cars are scrapped, the proportion of crashes that result in car occupant death will continue to fall for at least one decade into the future.

[1]  C. Crandall,et al.  Mortality Reduction with Air Bag and Seat Belt Use in Head-on Passenger Car Collisions , 2001 .

[2]  Amanda Kate Delaney,et al.  Crashworthiness and aggressivity of the Australian light vehicle fleet by major crash type , 2004 .

[3]  Stuart Vaughan Newstead,et al.  Characteristics of vehicles driven by different driver demographics: how can safer vehicle choices be encouraged? , 2010 .

[4]  Jaakko K. Kihlberg,et al.  Seat belt effectiveness in the non-ejection situation , 1963 .

[5]  Jean-Louis Martin,et al.  Estimating relative driver fatality and injury risk according to some characteristics of cars and drivers using matched-pair multivariate analysis , 2003 .

[6]  Timothy Paul Hutchinson,et al.  In Australia, is injury less in recent cars than in earlier cars? Evidence from comparing the injury severities of two drivers in the same collision , 2010 .

[7]  Gabriel E Ryb,et al.  Vehicle Model Year and Crash Outcomes: A CIREN Study , 2009, Traffic injury prevention.

[8]  P J Loukissas,et al.  HANDLING CHANGES IN HIGHWAY ACCIDENT DATA REPORTING: THE CASE OF PENNSYLVANIA'S TOWAWAY CRITERION , 1985 .

[9]  L M Olson,et al.  Mortality reduction with air bag and seat belt use in head-on passenger car collisions. , 2001, American journal of epidemiology.

[10]  Stuart Vaughan Newstead,et al.  Vehicle safety ratings estimated from police reported crash data: 2010 update: Australian and New Zealand crashes during 1987-2008 [supplement] , 2010 .

[11]  Jean-Louis Martin,et al.  A population based estimation of the driver protection provided by passenger cars: France 1996-2005. , 2008, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[12]  Robert Anderson,et al.  Vehicle Age-Related Crashworthiness of the South Australian Passenger Fleet , 2009 .