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Accident Reconstruction News Article
Results of Four-year Research Project to be announced at
Safety Summit in Washington, DC
NHTSA Administrator, Chairman of the NTSB, Director of the National Center
for Injury Prevention and Control and Safety Experts to Offer Community Intervention
Model
NASHVILLE, Tenn. & WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--June
29, 2006--A newly-released study from the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration (NHTSA) in Washington reveals that some minorities, including
African Americans, Latinos and American Indians, are far more likely than
the general population to be killed in motor vehicle crashes -- highlighting
a significant and largely overlooked public safety issue. National experts
speculate that cultural differences among minorities and lack of proper seatbelt
safety training may account for the disparity.
To address the public health crisis fueled by these and similar disparities
among a range of diverse populations uncovered in its own pioneering research,
the Meharry-State Farm Alliance, headquartered at Nashville's Meharry Medical
College, will convene a National Safety Summit, July 6-7, 2006, in Washington,
D.C., at the Hyatt Regency Washington Hotel on Capitol Hill.
The Meharry-State Farm Alliance, a joint venture uniting Meharry
Medical College and State Farm in a drive to save lives on America's roads,
was created in 2002 to address the public health crisis stemming from the
lack of seatbelt use among African Americans. The Alliance has since become
a nationally-esteemed advocate of injury prevention through research, education
and public policy. It is the sole repository for the nation's only comprehensive
database offering authoritative information on minority seat belt compliance.
The National Safety Summit will bring together citizen advocates,
policymakers, and research scholars to review best practices in motor vehicle
occupant safety and recommend a national policy and a model for implementing
interventions to decrease health disparities among racial, ethnic, and other
diverse groups due to motor vehicle crashes.
Nicole Nason, the new administrator of the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), former Secretary of Transportation
Rodney Slater, Mark Rosenker, Chairman of the National Transportation Safety
Board, and Ileana Arias, Director of the National Center for Injury Prevention
and Control, are confirmed participants. They are expected to stir Summit
participants to devise strategies to reduce fatalities on our nation's highways.
"We are honored to have the nation's foremost authorities
on motor vehicle occupant safety and advocacy join us in creating a community
model to reduce injuries and save lives," said Dr. A. Cherrie Epps, interim
president of Meharry Medical College. "Even as federal statistics track
what appear to be increases in compliance among the general motoring public,
continuing disparities in seat belt use within the African American and Latino
demographic and other diverse populations is a growing problem that should
be at the top of the national safety agenda. We look forward to a productive
Summit."
Clayton Adams, Vice President of Community Alliances, said,
"The Alliance has enabled us to raise public awareness of the facts about
the disparities in diverse populations uncovered in Alliance research. But,
more importantly, we have translated this research into education and public
policy initiatives that successfully persuade states to upgrade their motor
vehicle occupant safety laws. The Meharry-State Farm Alliance is a critical
part of State Farm's long standing commitment to making roads safer for our
customers and families."
In addition to addressing motor vehicle occupant restraint issues
at the Summit, the Meharry-State Farm Alliance will also present its research
results revealing wide gaps in compliance among African American sub-groups;
unveil a model comprehensive approach to motor vehicle occupant safety; and
reveal its considerable successes at influencing enactment of primary seat
belt laws and at helping to reduce motor vehicle crash fatalities among African
Americans since 2000, when the Alliance convened the original Blue Ribbon
Panel of federal government, public policy, and public safety officials from
across the nation.
While the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration reported
that seat belt use rates have climbed to 82 percent among the general population
of motorists since the Alliance began compiling data in 2002, subsequent Alliance
research has found that substantial gaps in compliance persist among African
Americans and other identifiable minorities. Safety Summit organizers hope
the two-day conference will not only raise awareness of seatbelt usage among
diverse populations, but also offer a model to increase seatbelt use, conduct
intervention research and encourage more states to adopt primary safety belt
legislation, which is proven to stimulate increased compliance among African
Americans.
In a soon-to-be-published study in the American Journal of Preventative
Medicine, noted Meharry-State Farm Alliance researcher, Nathaniel C. Briggs,
found that racial differences in seatbelt use vary according to the type of
seatbelt law enforced by individual states. In states with secondary seatbelt
laws, where motorists can be cited for a seatbelt law violation only if stopped
for another offense, blacks are significantly less likely to wear seatbelts
than whites. In states with primary laws, where motorists can be stopped solely
for not wearing a seat belt, the disparity disappears.
Through its study of the effects of primary enforcement of state
seatbelt laws, Alliance education initiatives have raised national awareness
of the importance of such laws. Since the Alliance's inception, five of the
seven states that have subsequently adopted primary enforcement seat-belt
laws - Illinois, Tennessee, Mississippi, Washington, and South Carolina -
collectively have reported saving $12 billion in societal costs, particularly
for healthcare; 1.5 million injuries prevented; and more than 1,200 lives
saved.
About the Meharry-State Farm Alliance
The Meharry-State Farm Alliance is a joint venture of Meharry
Medical College, an historically black academic health center in Nashville,
Tenn., and State Farm®, which insures more cars than any other insurer
in North America and is the leading U.S. home insurer. State Farm's 17,000
agents and 69,000 employees serve nearly 73 million auto, fire, life and health
policies in the United States and Canada.
Established in 2002, the Alliance focuses on research, education,
and public policy to reduce preventable deaths, injuries, and long-term disabilities
from vehicle crashes.
About Meharry
Meharry Medical College is the nation's largest private, independent
historically black institution dedicated solely to educating health science
professionals. The College is particularly well known for its uniquely nurturing,
highly effective educational programs; growing preeminence in health disparities
research; culturally sensitive, evidence-based health services; and significant
contribution to the diversity of the nation's health professions workforce.
Diverse Issues in Higher Education's ranking of institutions annually lists
Meharry as a leading educator of African Americans with M.D. and D.D.S. degrees
and Ph.D. degrees in the biomedical sciences.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Please refer to accompanying conference agenda
for full list of speakers and itinerary. Images for publication / broadcast
available upon request.
Contact:
Seigenthaler Public Relations
Mike Brewer, 615-327-7999
mike@seig-pr.com
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Source: Meharry Medical College
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