Child
Passenger Safety Fact Sheet
Motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause
of death for children of all races ages 4-14. In 2001, motor
vehicle crashes took the lives of 1,765 child passenger
vehicle occupants from birth to age 15 and injured some
220,000 more.
Forty percent of the 1,765 children who died in crashes
were unbelted. Tragically, nearly half of the children that
were unbelted would be alive today if only they had been
properly restrained.
Motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of death for
Hispanics through the age of 24. They are the leading cause
of death for African-American children through the age of
14 and the second leading cause of death, surpassed only
by homicides, for ages 15-24. They are the leading cause
of death for American Indians and Alaska Natives ages 1-44,
and Asian Americans, age 1-34.
According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
(NHTSA), motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of
death for 15-20-year-olds. And while young drivers ages
15-20 account for just 6.8 percent of licensed drivers (12.9
million), they represented 14 percent of all drivers involved
in fatal crashes and 17 percent (1,862,000) of police reported
crashes in 2001.
In 2001, 5,341 teens ages 16-20, were killed and thousands
more were injured in traffic crashes. Fatality rates for
teens are twice that of older drivers and the risk of crashes
for teen is four time that of older drivers.
Strong Seat Belt Laws Save Kids
National and state data show that unbelted
drivers have a dangerous impact on children. A crash study
by the University of California, Irvine, published in the
journal Pediatrics found: "Driver restraint use was
the strongest predictor of child restraint use. A restrained
driver was three times more likely to restrain a child."
A national observational study by NHTSA found that when
a driver is buckled, children are buckled 92 percent of
the time. However, when a driver is unbuckled, children
are restrained only 72 percent of the time.
Currently, only 18 states, the District of Columbia and
Puerto Rico have primary seat belt laws - laws that allow
law enforcement to stop and ticket a driver for not wearing
a seat belt just like any routine traffic violation. Thirty-one
states have weak secondary belt laws. On average usage rates
are 10-15 percentage points higher in states with primary
seat belt laws. When Louisiana passed a primary belt law,
child restraint use increased from 45 percent to 82 percent
- with no change to the state's child passenger safety law.
Every state has a child passenger safety law that includes
primary enforcement provisions. The laws vary from state
to state, with some laws covering only young children, some
covering only the front seat and some exempting pick-up
trucks and vans. Currently, only 34 jurisdictions require
that all children up to the age of 16 be restrained in every
seating position in every passenger vehicle.
Child Safety Seats and Seat Belts
Make the Difference
Child safety seats, when properly installed,
reduce the risk of death by 71 percent for infants and 54
percent for toddlers. From 1975 through 2001, an estimated
5,085 lives were saved by the use of child safety seats
or adult belts. In 2001, among children under five years
old, an estimated 269 lives were saved by child restraint
use.
Sadly, in 2001 there were 497 children age five and under
who died as occupants in motor vehicle crashes and of those
497, NHTSA estimates that 242 were totally unrestrained.
The U.S. Department of Transportation announced that, due
to the Mobilizations and other enforcement efforts, more
drivers are buckling up their children than ever before.
Since the effort began, child restraint use for infants
under age one has gone from 85 percent to 97 percent, and
for children ages one to four, it has climbed from 60 percent
to 91 percent. While restraint use for older children has
increased by four percentage points, 31 percent of the children
ages 5-15 ride completely unrestrained.
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