Brain Injuries
Sport Utility Vehicles (SUV), 15
Passenger Vans, & Brain Injuries
Sport Utility
Vehicle rollover accidents seriously injury
or kill about 10,000 people in the US each
year, more than side and rear crashes
combined. SUV and passenger vans are much
more likely to rollover or flip than
standard passenger vans.
Rollover accidents are responsible for:
• 51% of all deaths in SUVs
• 36% of deaths in trucks
• 19% of deaths in standard cars
SUV Rollover Deaths on the Rise.
Most drivers are not aware of the
significant dangers associated with driving
an SUV. Simple driving maneuvers like
avoiding an object in the road or
over-steering when passing another vehicle
can result in the SUV flipping over or
rollover with serious injury to the
passengers inside. Driving over 65 mph
significantly increases the risk and loss of
control. Sport Utility Vehicles were
originally designed as an off road vehicle,
not for high speed highway travel. Their
high center of gravity makes them top heavy
and taking corrective action or sudden
movement cause SUVs to rollover.
Vehicle Roof Problems - New Federal
Study.
A new federal study that could have major
implications in the growing debate over
vehicle roof strength found a strong link
between fatalities and injuries, and the
severity of crushed roofs in rollover
accidents. The new findings, however, could
provide crucial supporting evidence for
federal officials seeking to strengthen a
33-year-old roof strength standard that many
safety advocates say is far too weak to
protect U.S. motorists, particularly as
rollover-prone SUVs and pickups proliferate.
The National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration, which published the study
this month, said it plans to propose tougher
roof strength requirements by year's end.
The conclusions support earlier NHTSA
research that found a link between crushed
roofs and deaths.
Automakers are expected to oppose any
sweeping changes to the roof-strength
requirements for cars and trucks, which
could add cost and weight to millions of
vehicles.
In one important conclusion, NHTSA found
there was a clear statistical correlation
between the amount a roof intruded into the
passenger compartment and the severity of
injury. In cases where occupants weren't
injured, the vehicles averaged 16
centimeters of lost headroom due to roof
intrusion. In accidents with the most severe
injuries, the vehicles lost an average of 24
centimeters of headroom in the rollover
crashes.
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