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Journal Article

Citation

Meyer MC, Finney T. Chance 2005; 18(2): 16.

Comment On:

Chance 2005; 18(2): 3-15; and Chance 2005; 18(2):16

Copyright

(Copyright © 2005, Springer-Verlag)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

If a front-seat occupant wishes to ask the question, “If I get in an accident, am I less likely or more likely to die, if I have an airbag?” the proper way to answer this question is with the CDS dataset. With the FARS dataset, the question one can answer is, “If I get in a highway accident in which there is at least one fatality, am I less likely or more likely to die, if I have an airbag?”

It seems paradoxical that these two questions can have different answers, but they do. The CDS dataset can show us that in low-speed collisions, having an airbag increases the probability of death, and this is especially true for unseatbelted occupants where the main collision is from the side. This fact cannot be seen using the FARS dataset, because the information about low-speed crashes in which there was not a fatality is missing. The increase in risk to occupants in low-speed crashes, due to airbags, cannot be demonstrated.

Therefore, the CDS dataset is the proper tool to assess risk of death in an accident. The distinction is not at all obvious at the outset, and no blame should be attached to those who chose to use FARS for the original analyses. The airbag risk analysis is a great example of the subtleties and challenges of quantitative reasoning, but it is clearly demonstrated that the CDS analyses better reflect the truth about airbags. Not only can we reproduce the results from the analyses with FARS, but there are convincing explanations for the disparate results. This country’s commitment to airbags as a safety device needs to be reexamined immediately.

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