Motor vehicle crashes cost the American public $99 billion a year in medical expenses and productivity losses, according to a new study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The CDC, in evaluating crash data and Americans’ average earnings for 2005, found that the economic toll of traffic injuries amounts to $500 for each licensed driver in the U.S.
“This study highlights the magnitude of the problem of crash-related injuries from a cost perspective, and the numbers are staggering,” Dr. Grant Baldwin, director of CDC’s Division of Unintentional Injury Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control said in a statement.
Among the study’s findings:
- Due to the severity of their injuries, motorcyclists account for 12 percent of total costs, even though they represent only 6 percent of fatalities and injuries. Similarly, pedestrians account for 10 percent of costs, but just 5 percent of injuries and deaths.
- Teenagers account for 28 percent of injuries and fatalities, but only 14 percent of the U.S. population. Teens also represent 31 percent of the costs ($31 billion).
- More men were killed (70 percent) and injured (52 percent) than women. Injuries and deaths among men represented nearly three-quarters of all costs ($74 billion).
- Fatal injuries accounted for about $58 billion of the cost. Non-fatal injuries resulting in hospitalization amounted to $28 billion, and people treated in emergency rooms and discharged cost $14 billion.



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