In-Depth Accident Data and Occupant Protection - A Statistical Point of View

740569

02/01/1974

Event
3rd International Conference on Occupant Protection (1974)
Authors Abstract
Content
The current federal accident data collection system is inadequate. It does not produce representative data essential for answering cause-and-effect questions concerning accidents, injuries, and fatalities, and it does not produce adequate data essential for conducting cost-benefit analyses of changes in vehicle designs, highway designs, or driver licensing policies. A proposed federal data collection system (SIR) can solve those problems at a total cost of about $6 million a year. The SIR system would include 30 investigating teams precisely located throughout the U.S., and would include a Sampling program, an In-depth program, and a Rapid-response program. The sooner this system is established, the sooner government and industry will begin to obtain accurate and reliable answers to pressing questions in the field of highway safety.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/740569
Pages
8
Citation
O'Day, J., "In-Depth Accident Data and Occupant Protection - A Statistical Point of View," SAE Technical Paper 740569, 1974, https://doi.org/10.4271/740569.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Feb 1, 1974
Product Code
740569
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English