a Neuroscience Research Australia , University of New South Wales , Randwick , New South Wales , Australia.
Traffic Inj Prev. 2014;15(5):462-9. doi: 10.1080/15389588.2013.833662.
To compare the pattern of injuries to front and rear seat occupants and test the hypothesis that rear seat passengers of different ages sustain different patterns of injury.
Patients admitted to a hospital following involvement in a crash in New South Wales (NSW) Australia between 2005 and 2007 were identified using International Classification of Diseases (10th edition [ICD10]) codes. Hospital admissions data were linked with NSW police crash data using probabilistic techniques. The profiles and patterns of injury of front and rear seat passengers were compared. Logistic regression was used to examine how age influenced the pattern of injury among rear seat passengers.
Sixty-three percent of hospital admissions were linked with police records. One in 5 passengers were rear seat passengers. There were more unrestrained occupants in the rear (7%) compared to drivers (3%) and front seat passengers (2%). Younger (9-15 years) injured passengers were seated in the rear more often than in the front passenger position and older injured passengers (>50 years) were seated more often in the front passenger position than in the rear (15% rear compared to 5% front aged 9-15 years; 22% rear compared to 37% front aged >50 years; χ(2), P < .001). There were proportionally more fatal injuries among rear seat passengers (10%) than among drivers (5%) and front seat passengers (6%), and the pattern of injury between front and rear passengers also varied. Rear seat passengers had more head and abdominal injuries and fewer thoracic and knee/lower leg injuries than front seat passengers. After adjusting for vehicle age, restraint status, travel speed, and whether or not a fatality occurred in the crash, older (>50 years) rear passengers had 6.3 times the odds of sustaining thoracic injuries (95% confidence interval [CI], 2.6-15.0) and lower odds (odds ratio [OR] = 0.4, 95% CI, 0.2-0.9) of sustaining abdominal/lumbar injuries than the youngest occupants (9-15 years).The odds of sustaining a head injury did not vary with age, and the odds of sustaining thoracic, abdominal, or lower extremity injuries did not differ significantly between rear seat passengers aged 16-50 years and 9-15 years.
The findings suggest that there is a need for enhanced protection for rear seat passengers, because they have proportionally more fatal injuries than front-seated occupants. The frequency of abdominal injury and the differences between injury patterns observed in front seat passengers suggests a potential benefit from adding abdominal injury risk assessment to rear seat occupant protection test protocols. There is also scope to improve chest protection for older rear seat passengers.
比较前排和后排乘客的受伤模式,并检验后排乘客年龄不同导致受伤模式不同的假设。
使用国际疾病分类(第十版[ICD10])代码,在 2005 年至 2007 年期间澳大利亚新南威尔士州(NSW)发生的车祸中,确定住院患者。使用概率技术将医院入院数据与新南威尔士州警方的碰撞数据联系起来。比较前排和后排乘客的受伤情况和模式。使用逻辑回归检验年龄如何影响后排乘客的受伤模式。
63%的住院患者与警方记录相关联。五分之一的乘客是后排乘客。后排(7%)未系安全带的乘客比驾驶员(3%)和前排乘客(2%)多。受伤的年轻乘客(9-15 岁)比前排乘客更常坐在后排(9-15 岁的后排乘客比前排乘客多 15%;年龄>50 岁的后排乘客比前排乘客多 22%;χ(2),P<.001)。后排乘客的致命伤比例(10%)高于驾驶员(5%)和前排乘客(6%),且前排和后排乘客的受伤模式也有所不同。后排乘客的头部和腹部受伤比例较高,而胸部和膝盖/小腿受伤比例较低。调整车辆年龄、约束状态、行驶速度以及碰撞中是否发生死亡后,年龄较大(>50 岁)的后排乘客发生胸部受伤的几率是最小年龄组(9-15 岁)乘客的 6.3 倍(95%置信区间[CI],2.6-15.0),而腹部/腰部受伤的几率较低(比值比[OR] = 0.4,95%CI,0.2-0.9)。头部受伤的几率与年龄无关,而 16-50 岁和 9-15 岁的后排乘客的胸部、腹部或下肢受伤的几率差异无统计学意义。
这些发现表明,需要为后排乘客提供更加强大的保护,因为他们的致命伤比例高于前排乘客。腹部受伤的频率以及在前排乘客中观察到的受伤模式差异表明,在后排乘客保护测试方案中增加腹部受伤风险评估可能会带来好处。改善老年后排乘客的胸部保护也有一定的空间。