Credit: IIHS. A new, interesting study is out regarding car accidents. It gathers data on whether men or women are more likely to suffer a serious injury when involved in a crash. According to research from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, women are at higher risk of injury. Researchers say the reasons are two-fold: 1) the types of vehicles women drive and 2) the circumstances of their crashes, rather than physical differences. �Our study shows that today�s crash testing programs have helped women as much as men,� says Jessica Jermakian, IIHS vice president of vehicle research and one of the study�s authors. �That said, we found that women are substantially more likely to suffer leg injuries, which is something that will require more investigation.� The study found that while men are involved in more fatal crashes, on a per-crash basis:
However, when IIHS researchers limited the comparison to similar crashes, they say the discrepancies mostly disappeared and that crashworthiness improvements have benefited men and women more or less equally. �The numbers indicate that women more often drive smaller, lighter cars and that they�re more likely than men to be driving the struck vehicle in side-impact and front-into-rear crashes,� says Jermakian. �Once you account for that, the difference in the odds of most injuries narrows dramatically.� In its press release, the IIHS says the discrepancy in injury risk for men and women has recently prompted calls for new crash test dummies that better reflect how women�s bodies react to the forces of collisions and other changes to crash-testing programs. IIHS says the purpose of its new study was to shed more light on the issue and look into what kind of changes to its own vehicle testing program might be warranted. The researchers analyzed the injuries of men and women in police-reported tow-away front and side crashes from 1998-2015.
To determine how much of the discrepancy was due to physical differences between men and women, the researchers say they then repeated the analysis with a limited set of �compatible� front crashes. This subset was restricted to single-vehicle crashes and two-vehicle crashes in which the vehicles were a similar size or weight or the crash configuration was such that a size or weight difference would not have played a big role. To further reduce differences among crashes, only those with a front airbag deployment were included. The IIHS says the sample included too few cases to do the same thing with side crashes. Limiting the analysis to compatible front impacts flattened the disparity considerably, though women were still twice as likely to be moderately injured and a bit more likely to be seriously hurt. A further analysis of those crashes, as well as the unrestricted set of side crashes, showed that good ratings in the Institute�s moderate overlap front and side tests lowered the odds of most injuries more or less equally for both sexes. In the compatible front crashes, the benefits of a good rating in the moderate overlap front test were greater for women except in the case of leg injuries, where the benefit was similar. In the side-impact crashes, a good rating in the side test benefited men and women about equally where moderate injuries were concerned, but the benefits of a more crashworthy vehicle were greater for women for most types of serious injuries. These results are in line with previous research that shows serious and fatal injury risk has declined more for women than men as vehicles have gotten safer. One explanation of the higher injury rates for women could be vehicle choice. Men and women crashed in minivans and SUVs in about equal proportions. However, around 70 percent of women crashed in cars, compared with about 60 percent of men. More than 20 percent of men crashed in pickups, compared with less than 5 percent of women. Within vehicle classes, men also tended to crash in heavier vehicles, which offer more protection in collisions. In a separate analysis of data from the federal Fatality Analysis Reporting System, the researchers also found that in two-vehicle front-to-rear and front-to-side crashes, men are more likely to be driving the striking vehicle. Because the driver of the striking vehicle is at lower risk of injury than the struck vehicle in such crashes, this could also account for some of the differences in crash outcomes for men and women. The researchers� analysis of compatible front crashes did show some sex-related differences, however. Women were still more than 2� times as likely to suffer moderate leg injuries. They were also about 70 percent more likely than men to suffer serious leg injuries, though that figure wasn�t statistically significant. �The good news is that changes like strengthening the occupant compartment and improving seat belts and airbags have helped protect both men and women,� says Jermakian. �Homing in on the risk disparities that still exist in compatible crashes gives us a great opportunity to make further gains.� |
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