The University of Adelaide CENTRE FOR AUTOMOTIVE SAFETY RESEARCH

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TitleIn Australia, is injury less in recent cars than in earlier cars? Evidence from comparing the injury severities of two drivers in the same collision
AuthorsAnderson RWG, Hutchinson TP
Year2010
TypeConference Paper
AbstractComparison of the severities of injury to the two drivers in the one collision is useful because speed of the impact is the same for the two drivers. Using the dataset of routinely-reported crashes in South Australia, 1991-2008, a multiple logistic regression was carried out, the dependent variable being the ratio of the probabilities of the drivers of car 2 and car 1 being killed, conditional on exactly one of them being killed. The independent variables were the difference between the two cars in their build years, the difference between the drivers’ ages, and an allowance for whether the vehicles fell within a narrow definition of car. Statistically significant effects were found for all of these. In a similar regression with the probabilities referring to the drivers being seriously injured, an effect of car year was again found.
Conference Name2010 Australasian Road Safety Research, Policing and Education Conference
Conference AbbreviationRSR
Conference LocationCanberra
Conference Date31 August - 3 September 2010
Page Count8

Reference
Anderson RWG, Hutchinson TP (2010). In Australia, is injury less in recent cars than in earlier cars? Evidence from comparing the injury severities of two drivers in the same collision. 2010 Australasian Road Safety Research, Policing and Education Conference, Canberra, 31 August - 3 September 2010.


Files Available for Download
CASRcomparinginjuryseverity1182.pdforiginal PDF as published online