«8 people are killed and 1,180 people are injured EVERY
DAY in motor vehicle crashes involving distracted drivers» (Source: NHTSA)
An average of 115 persons die
each day in motor vehicle crashes in the United States — one every 13 minutes.
During the course of 2013, 6,337 people were injured
each day in motor vehicle crashes, according to Rocky Mountain Insurance Information Association.
Not exact matches
One
day after the controlled substances test was confirmed as positive — September 14, 2016 — Price operated a commercial
motor vehicle in Utah and was involved
in a
crash with a pick - up truck.
About 90 people die each
day from
motor vehicle crashes in the United States, resulting
in the highest death rate among 19 high - income comparison countries, according to the latest Vital Signs report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Just
days earlier, Hubert was involved
in a horrific
motor vehicle crash which broke his neck and left him paralyzed.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate that every
day,
in the United States, nearly 30 people die
in motor vehicle crashes that involve a drunk driver.
According to the CDC, every
day 32 people
in the United States die,
in motor vehicle crashes that involve an alcohol - impaired driver.
Despite the implementation of highway safety programs such as Click It or Tick It, Don't Text and Drive, and Drive Sober or Get Pulled Over,
motor vehicle crashes claim lives and cause injuries every
day in Illinois.
There were over 100 fatalities per
day in 2016, and
motor vehicle crashes were reported as the # 1 cause of death for ages 16 through 23
in the year 2015.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, approximately 30 people die each
day in the United States
in motor vehicle crashes involving an alcohol - impaired driver.
On average, three children age 14 and younger were killed and 469 were injured every
day in the United States
in motor vehicle crashes.
Nationally,
motor vehicle crashes remain the leading cause of death for U.S. teens and,
in 2010, seven teens between the ages 16 and 19 died every
day on average from
motor vehicle injuries, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The DOT found that more teenagers are involved
in motor vehicle crashes late
in the
day and at night than at other times of the
day.