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Accident Reconstruction News Article
New Study Shows States With Primary Seat Belt Laws Have Significantly
Lower Fatality Rates
WASHINGTON, March 13 /PRNewswire/ -- Motor vehicle occupants
have a 17 percent greater chance of being killed if they are in a crash in
a state with a secondary enforcement seat belt law than in a state with a
stronger primary enforcement law according to a new study of crash fatality
data from 2000-2004 by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
(NHTSA).
The study found that the fatality rate per 100 million vehicle miles traveled
(VMT) in states not having primary enforcement laws was 1.21, compared to
1.03 in states with primary enforcement, or 17 percent higher. The fatality
rate per 100,000 population was 23 percent higher in states not having primary
enforcement laws. Fatality rates were higher for all age groups in the states
not having primary enforcement seat belt laws.
"The evidence is clear that the cost of a weak seat belt
law is precious lives lost, and often young lives," said Phil Haseltine,
Executive Director of the National Safety Council's Air Bag & Seat Belt
Safety Campaign. "Traffic crash injuries and fatalities are an epidemic
-- we would not let a disease go untreated if we had a cure, and we should
not sit by and watch more needless death and injury on our roadways because
of weak seat belt laws. It's time for our elected leaders to treat seat belt
laws like other traffic laws, enact laws and eliminate crippling secondary
enforcement provisions."
The new study adds to the large body of research showing that
states with the lowest seat belt use generally have weak secondary laws requiring
officers to witness another traffic law violation before stopping someone
for not buckling up. Twenty-four states and the District of Columbia have
passed primary enforcement laws allowing law enforcement officers to stop
and ticket drivers based solely on a seat belt violation. According to the
NHTSA, seat belt use averages 11 percentage-points higher in states that have
primary enforcement laws, which cover more than 62 percent of the U.S. population.
The Air Bag & Seat Belt Safety Campaign, a program of the
National Safety Council, is a public/private partnership of automotive manufacturers,
insurance companies, child safety seat manufacturers, government agencies,
health professionals and child health and safety organizations. The goal of
the Campaign is to increase the proper use of safety belts and child safety
seats and to inform the public about how to maximize the lifesaving capabilities
of air bags while minimizing the risks.
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Source: Air Bag & Seat Belt Safety Campaign
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