Crash costs by body part injured, fracture involvement, and threat-to-life severity. United States, 2000.

This paper presents costs per US motor vehicle crash victim differentiated into many more diagnostic categories than prior estimates. These unit costs, which include the first keyed to the 1990 edition of Abbreviated Injury Scale (AIS) threat-to-life severity scores, are reported by body part, whether a fracture/dislocation was involved, and the maximum AIS score among the victim's injuries. This level of detail allows for a more accurate estimation of the social costs of motor vehicle crashes. It also allows for reliable analyses of interventions targeting narrow ranges of injuries. The paper updates the medical care data underlying the US crash costs from 1979 to 1986 to the mid 1990s and improves on prior productivity cost estimates. In addition to presenting the latest generation of crash victim costs, this paper analyzes the effects of applying injury costs classified by AIS code from the 1985 edition to injury incidence data coded with the 1990 edition of AIS. This long-standing practice results in inaccurate cost-benefit analyses that typically overestimate benefits. This problem is more acute when old published costs adjusted for inflation are used rather than the recent costs.

[1]  Daniel M. Violette,et al.  The Relevance of Willingness-To-Pay Estimates of The Value of a Statistical Life in Determining Wrongful Death Awards , 1990 .

[2]  Michael J. Moore,et al.  Rates of time preference and valuations of the duration of life , 1989 .

[3]  T. Miller Societal Costs of Transportation Crashes , 1997 .

[4]  Gordon S. Smith,et al.  COST OF INJURY IN THE UNITED STATES: A REPORT TO CONGRESS , 1989 .

[5]  Ted R. Miller,et al.  Estimating the costs of non-fatal consumer product injuries in the United States , 2000 .

[6]  Susan A. Ferguson,et al.  A METHOD FOR CONVERTING INJURY SEVERITY IN NASS93 (AIS90) TO NASS88 (AIS85) , 1996 .

[7]  M. Cropper,et al.  Discounting Human Lives , 1991 .

[8]  Frank D. Tinari The Dollar Value of a Day: 1997 Dollar Valuation , 1999 .

[9]  J. Mercy,et al.  National Estimates of Nonfatal Firearm-Related Injuries - Beyond the Tip , 1995 .

[10]  Ted R. Miller,et al.  THE ECONOMIC IMPACT OF MOTOR VEHICLE CRASHES, 2000 , 2002 .

[11]  T R Miller,et al.  Costs and functional consequences of U.S. roadway crashes. , 1993, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[12]  J. Mercy,et al.  National estimates of nonfatal firearm-related injuries. Beyond the tip of the iceberg. , 1995, JAMA.

[13]  Laura O. Taylor,et al.  What Determines the Value of Life: A Meta‐Analysis , 2002 .

[14]  Stan V. Smith Jury Verdicts and the Dollar Value of Human Life , 2000 .

[15]  Kennerly Digges,et al.  Crash protection offered by safety belts , 1987 .

[16]  A. C. Malliaris,et al.  Harm Causation and Ranking in Car Crashes , 1985 .

[17]  T R Miller,et al.  DATABOOK ON NONFATAL INJURY: INCIDENCE, COSTS, AND CONSEQUENCES , 1995 .

[18]  David Dyte,et al.  Side impact regulation benefits , 1995 .

[19]  T. Miller The Plausible Range for the Value of Life––Red Herrings Among the Mackerel , 1990 .

[20]  T. Miller Valuing Nonfatal Quality of Life Losses with Quality-Adjusted Life Years: The Health Economist's Meow , 2000 .

[21]  David Dyte,et al.  Benefits of a Frontal Offset Regulation , 1996 .

[22]  S Tylko,et al.  Toward a comprehensive biomechanical injury cost model. , 1994, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[23]  D. Commerce Statistical abstract of the United States , 1978 .

[24]  T R Miller,et al.  The costs of highway crashes , 1991 .

[25]  M. Gold Cost-effectiveness in health and medicine , 2016 .

[26]  T. Miller,et al.  The cost of childhood unintentional injuries and the value of prevention. , 2000, The Future of children.

[27]  R. N. Anderson,et al.  United States life tables, 1997. , 1999, National vital statistics reports : from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics, National Vital Statistics System.