When teenage drivers get into deadly car wrecks, they and their passengers are far from the only victims. A new report that highlights the broader devastation of these auto crashes concludes that others — mostly occupants of other vehicles, but also pedestrians and bicyclists — account for 28 percent of the people who die.
Researchers from Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and State Farm Insurance Companies compiled the report from federal accident data. The figures showed that, in 2008, 681,000 people were involved in crashes in which a teen driver was behind the wheel. Of the 4,358 people killed in those crashes, 72 percent were teen drivers and their passengers.
“When most people think about those affected by teen driver crashes, they think of the teens behind the wheel. We must also consider the significant impact of these crashes on other members of our communities,” Dr. Dennis Durbin, a co-author of the report, said in a news release.
According to Durbin, more than half of the teen drivers killed were speeding and 40 percent had positive blood-alcohol levels. More than half were not wearing seat belts and 16 percent were reported to have been distracted while driving.
“Reducing speeding and alcohol use, increasing seat belt use, and eliminating distractions for teen drivers are the four calls-to-action we see in this report that would have great impact on reducing injuries and fatalities for all road users,” Durbin said.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported last year that fatal crashes involving drivers ages 16 or 17 dropped by 38 percent between 2004 and 2008. But car accidents are still the leading cause of death for teens in the U.S.
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