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Factors related to fatal injury in frontal crashes involving European cars

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posted on 2006-10-26, 09:15 authored by Richard FramptonRichard Frampton, Marianne Page, Pete Thomas
Despite considerable improvements in frontal impact crashworthiness, frontal crashes still account for a major number of front seat occupant fatalities in Great Britain. This study attempted to determine the remaining potential for further fatality reduction with passive safety improvements in frontal crashes. No evidence was found to support an increase in crash test speeds. Instead, assessment of scope for survival showed that at least 27% of all fatal drivers and 39% of all fatal front seat passengers have survival potential given attention to older occupant’s chest injury tolerance and passenger compartment intrusion under 60 km/h. Considering only fatal frontal crashes that might be assessed with a barrier test, showed an estimated survival potential of at least 49% of belted drivers and 60% of belted front seat passengers. The high proportion of unbelted fatalities suggested that targeting unbelted occupant protection could have additional benefit.

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Citation

FRAMPTON, PAGE and THOMAS, 2006. Factors related to fatal injury in frontal crashes involving European cars. IN: Proceedings of 50th Conference of the Association for the Advancement of Automotive Medicine, 16-18 October, Chicago

Publication date

2006

Notes

This is a refereed conference paper.

ISSN

1540-0360

Language

  • en

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