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后排座椅安全:乘客、碰撞和车辆特征对保护效果的影响。

Rear seat safety: Variation in protection by occupant, crash and vehicle characteristics.

机构信息

The Department of Pediatrics, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, United States; The Center for Injury Research and Prevention, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Research Institute, United States; The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, United States.

The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, United States.

出版信息

Accid Anal Prev. 2015 Jul;80:185-92. doi: 10.1016/j.aap.2015.04.006. Epub 2015 Apr 22.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES

Current information on the safety of rear row occupants of all ages is needed to inform further advances in rear seat restraint system design and testing. The objectives of this study were to describe characteristics of occupants in the front and rear rows of model year 2000 and newer vehicles involved in crashes and determine the risk of serious injury for restrained crash-involved rear row occupants and the relative risk of fatal injury for restrained rear row vs. front passenger seat occupants by age group, impact direction, and vehicle model year.

METHOD

Data from the National Automotive Sampling System Crashworthiness Data System (NASS-CDS) and Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS) were queried for all crashes during 2007-2012 involving model year 2000 and newer passenger vehicles. Data from NASS-CDS were used to describe characteristics of occupants in the front and rear rows and to determine the risk of serious injury (AIS 3+) for restrained rear row occupants by occupant age, vehicle model year, and impact direction. Using a combined data set containing data on fatalities from FARS and estimates of the total population of occupants in crashes from NASS-CDS, logistic regression modeling was used to compute the relative risk (RR) of death for restrained occupants in the rear vs. front passenger seat by occupant age, impact direction, and vehicle model year.

RESULTS

Among all vehicle occupants in tow-away crashes during 2007-2012, 12.3% were in the rear row where the overall risk of serious injury was 1.3%. Among restrained rear row occupants, the risk of serious injury varied by occupant age, with older adults at the highest risk of serious injury (2.9%); by impact direction, with rollover crashes associated with the highest risk (1.5%); and by vehicle model year, with model year 2007 and newer vehicles having the lowest risk of serious injury (0.3%). Relative risk of death was lower for restrained children up to age 8 in the rear compared with passengers in the right front seat (RR=0.27, 95% CI 0.12-0.58 for 0-3 years, RR=0.55, 95% CI 0.30-0.98 for 4-8 years) but was higher for restrained 9-12-year-old children (RR=1.83, 95% CI 1.18-2.84). There was no evidence for a difference in risk of death in the rear vs. front seat for occupants ages 13-54, but there was some evidence for an increased relative risk of death for adults age 55 and older in the rear vs. passengers in the right front seat (RR=1.41, 95% CI 0.94-2.13), though we could not exclude the possibility of no difference. After controlling for occupant age and gender, the relative risk of death for restrained rear row occupants was significantly higher than that of front seat occupants in model year 2007 and newer vehicles and significantly higher in rear and right side impact crashes.

CONCLUSIONS

Results of this study extend prior research on the relative safety of the rear seat compared with the front by examining a more contemporary fleet of vehicles. The rear row is primarily occupied by children and adolescents, but the variable relative risk of death in the rear compared with the front seat for occupants of different age groups highlights the challenges in providing optimal protection to a wide range of rear seat occupants. Findings of an elevated risk of death for rear row occupants, as compared with front row passengers, in the newest model year vehicles provides further evidence that rear seat safety is not keeping pace with advances in the front seat.

摘要

目的

为了进一步推进后排座椅约束系统的设计和测试,需要了解目前关于所有年龄段后排乘客安全的信息。本研究的目的是描述 2000 年及更新车型车辆中碰撞事故中前排和后排乘客的特征,并确定约束后排乘客严重受伤的风险以及约束后排乘客与前排乘客相比,因年龄组、碰撞方向和车辆型号年而发生致命伤害的相对风险。

方法

从国家汽车抽样系统碰撞安全性数据系统(NASS-CDS)和致命事故分析报告系统(FARS)中查询了 2007 年至 2012 年期间所有涉及 2000 年及更新车型的乘客车辆碰撞事故的数据。使用 NASS-CDS 数据描述前排和后排乘客的特征,并根据乘客年龄、车辆型号年和碰撞方向,确定约束后排乘客严重受伤(AIS 3+)的风险。利用包含 FARS 死亡数据和 NASS-CDS 中碰撞中乘客总数估计值的综合数据集,使用逻辑回归模型计算约束后排乘客与前排乘客相比的死亡相对风险(RR),并根据乘客年龄、碰撞方向和车辆型号年进行分层。

结果

在 2007 年至 2012 年期间的拖曳式碰撞中,所有车辆乘客中有 12.3%在后排,后排乘客严重受伤的总体风险为 1.3%。在约束后排乘客中,受伤风险因乘客年龄而异,老年人受伤风险最高(2.9%);因碰撞方向而异,翻车碰撞的风险最高(1.5%);因车辆型号年而异,模型年份 2007 年及更新车型的严重受伤风险最低(0.3%)。与右前乘客相比,约束的 0-3 岁和 4-8 岁儿童的死亡相对风险较低(RR=0.27,95%CI 0.12-0.58,RR=0.55,95%CI 0.30-0.98),但 9-12 岁儿童的死亡相对风险较高(RR=1.83,95%CI 1.18-2.84)。约束的 13-54 岁乘客在后排和前排座位的死亡风险没有差异的证据,但对于 55 岁及以上的成年人,在后排和右前乘客座位的死亡风险存在一定差异(RR=1.41,95%CI 0.94-2.13),尽管我们不能排除无差异的可能性。在控制了乘客年龄和性别后,约束后排乘客的死亡相对风险明显高于模型年份 2007 年及更新车型前排乘客的死亡相对风险,并且在后排和右侧碰撞中明显更高。

结论

本研究通过检查更现代的车辆车队,扩展了先前关于后排座椅与前排座椅相对安全性的研究。后排主要由儿童和青少年占据,但不同年龄组后排乘客与前排乘客相比死亡的相对风险不同,这突显了为广泛的后排乘客提供最佳保护的挑战。与前排乘客相比,最新车型年车辆中后排乘客死亡风险升高的发现进一步表明,后排座椅的安全性没有跟上前排座椅的进步。

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