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Journal Article

Citation

Travis LL, Clark DE, Haskins AE, Kilch JA. J. Saf. Res. 2012; 43(5-6): 375-380.

Affiliation

Center for Outcomes Research and Evaluation, Maine Medical Center, Portland ME. Electronic address: travil1@mmc.org.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2012, U.S. National Safety Council, Publisher Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jsr.2012.10.004

PMID

23206510

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Mortality from traffic crashes is often higher in rural regions, and this may be attributable to decreased survival probability after severe injury. METHODS: Data were obtained from the National Automotive Sampling System - General Estimates System (NASS-GES) for 2002-2008. Using weighted survey logistic regression, three injury outcomes were analyzed: (a) Death overall, (b) Severe injury (incapacitating or fatal), and (c) Death, after severe injury. Models controlled for (pre-crash) person, event, and county level factors. RESULTS: The sample included 883,473 motorists. Applying weights, this represented a population of 98,411,993. Only 2% of the weighted sample sustained a severe injury, and 9% of these severely injured motorists died. The probability of death overall and the probability of severe injury increased with older age, safety belt nonuse, vehicle damage, high speed, and early morning crashes . Males were less likely to be severely injured, but more likely to die if severely injured. Motorists in southern states were more likely to have severe injuries, but not more likely to die if severely injured. Motorists who crashed in very rural counties were significantly more likely to die overall, and were more likely to die if severely injured. CONCLUSIONS: Motorists with severe injury are more likely to die in rural areas, after controlling for person- and event-specific factors.


Language: en

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