Single -
vehicle crashes accounted for 44 % of these deaths.
Alcohol - related motor
vehicle crashes account for almost 10,000 deaths and half a million injuries every year in the United States.
According to the article,
vehicle crashes account for roughly 40 % of all police officer fatalities, and they have been the single largest cause of death for police officers since the mid-1990s.
Not exact matches
The study, conducted jointly by researchers at Harvard and UT Southwestern Medical Center, is the first to look at state - level trends in child fatalities involving motor
vehicle crashes, and to
account for differences in geography and state laws and regulations.
These applications are complex and difficult to set up and run because they render simulated car
crashes under very specific conditions, taking into
account factors such as the type of
vehicle, road conditions and speed.
That means it is less inclined to roll over than traditional SUVs — a matter of some concern to SUV opponents, although rollovers
account for 2.5 percent of all
crashes involving all kinds of
vehicles on U.S. roads.
Part of the disconnect between these results and the Institute's estimates of the feature's potential probably has to do with the fact that
crashes in which
vehicles drift off the road aren't common, even though they
account for a large proportion of fatal
crashes.
In a 2009 Institute study of
vehicles with good ratings for frontal
crash protection, small overlap
crashes accounted for nearly a quarter of the frontal
crashes involving serious or fatal injury to front seat occupants.
Vehicles roll in just 2 percent of
crashes, but these
crashes account for more than a third of passenger
vehicle occupant deaths.
In a release issued yesterday the institute said results from 2009 testing showed that small overlap
crashes accounted for nearly a quarter of the frontal
crashes involving serious or fatal injury to front seat occupants in
vehicles that otherwise had good rating for frontal
crash protection.
The force of the deploying airbag (16 percent) and ejection from the
vehicle (13 percent) also
accounted for significant portions of the driver deaths in these frontal
crashes.
In a 2009 IIHS study of
vehicles with good ratings for frontal
crash protection, small overlap
crashes accounted for nearly a quarter of the frontal
crashes involving serious or fatal injury to front seat occupants.
The authors used a nationally representative sample of police - reported
crashes in the United States to show that, after
accounting for
crash severity, front - seat occupants in
vehicles with airbags had higher fatality rates than those in
vehicles without airbags.
Similarly, in a U.K. study, pedestrian behavior
accounted for 90 percent of
crashes where
vehicle struck a pedestrian.
Similarly, in a U.K. study, pedestrian behaviour
accounted for 90 percent of
crashes where
vehicle struck a pedestrian.
According to a report by the Virginia Highway Safety Office, 775 people were killed in motor
vehicle crashes in the state in 2012, which
accounted for a 1.44 percent increase in traffic fatalities when compared with the previous year.
Untripped rollover accidents
account for only 5 % of rollover
crashes, and usually only pertain to top - heavy
vehicles such as SUVs or semi-trucks.
However, statistical data on two
vehicle crashes that involved a collision of a large truck with a passenger automobile indicates that the occupants inside the passenger
vehicle were at greater risk of dying, and
accounted for 97 percent of all deaths.
Large trucks, like semis,
account for 4 percent of all
vehicles involved in injury and property damage
crashes.
The Glenn Law Firm will investigate your side - impact collision accident, fully reconstruct the details factoring in all of the circumstances that led to the accident and advocate for a settlement that
accounts for damages to your
vehicle as well as any personal injury that may have resulted from the
crash.
According to research by the Kentucky Transportation Center of the University of Kentucky, motorcycle
crashes accounted for only 1.6 percent of the state's traffic accidents in 2012; however, they were responsible for 6.2 percent of traffic accident injuries, and 13.4 percent of motor
vehicle accident fatalities.
Motorcyclist fatalities
account for 14 % of total
crash fatalities, and per
vehicle mile traveled, bikers are about 37 times more likely than passenger car occupants to die in a
crash and 9 times more likely to be injured.
Passenger cars and light trucks
accounted for nearly 95 percent of the 11 million
vehicles involved in motor
vehicle crashes in 2004.
According to the Centers for Disease Control, motor
vehicle vehicle crashes are the leading cause of death for teens in the United States,
accounting for a full 30 percent of all teen deaths.
In fact, reckless driving
accounted for approximately 51 % of the total economic
crash costs ($ 230.6 billion) of all 16.4 million U.S. motor
vehicle collisions in 2000 [7].