| News & Items of
Interest 05/06/03 DOT Releases Preliminary Estimates Of 2002 Highway Fatalities |
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Alcohol-related
highway fatalities increased again in 2002 while the With overall
highway fatalities also up slightly from 2001, the grim It was the highest number of fatalities since 1990. "If we are
ever going to reduce the needless deaths on the nation's Fatalities in rollover crashes involving sport
utility vehicles and pickup The preliminary report also notes some significant progress. NHTSA said that deaths of children seven and
under dropped to historic low levels. In 2002, 980 children seven and
under were killed, down from NHTSA earlier estimated that highway crashes cost society $230.6 billion a year, about $820 per person. "As a nation,
we should be outraged over the loss of nearly 43,000 of our The preliminary 2002 statistics also continue to show the increased risk of death and injury when drivers and passengers do not wear safety belts: 59 percent of those killed in crashes last year were not belted. NHTSA's Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS) also shows that, in 2002: * Motorcycle fatalities increased for the fifth year in a row following years of steady improvement. A total of 3,276 riders died, up three percent from 2001. Deaths among riders 50 and over increased 24 percent. * Of the total, alcohol-related deaths in 2002 accounted for 42 percent - 17,970 deaths - up from 41 percent (17,448) in 2001. Deaths in low alcohol crashes (.01-.07 blood alcohol content) dropped 7.2 percent to 2,335 deaths. Deaths of persons in high alcohol crashes (.08 BAC and above) rose 4.7 percent. Alcohol-related fatalities have been rising steadily since 1999. * Fatalities from large truck crashes dropped from 5,082 in 2001 to 4,902 in 2002, a 3.5 percent decline. * Young drivers (16-20) were involved in 7,722 fatal crashes in 2002, up slightly from 7,598 in 2001. * The number of occupant fatalities for children ages eight to 15 increased by nearly nine percent. * In 2002, vehicle miles traveled increased slightly to 2.83 trillion, up from 2.78 trillion in 2001, according to the DOT's Federal Highway Administration. NHTSA annually collects crash statistics from 50 states and the District of Columbia to produce the annual report on traffic fatality trends.
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