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Science/Tech See other Science/Tech Articles Title: Airbags associated with increased probability of death in accidents, study finds Airbags associated with increased probability of death in accidents, study finds June 02, 2005 The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) estimates that airbags installed in automobiles have saved some 10,000 lives as of January 2004. A just-released study by a statistician at the University of Georgia, however, casts doubt on that assertion. In fact, said UGA statistics professor Mary C. Meyer, a new analysis of existing data indicates that, controlling for other factors, airbags are actually associated with slightly increased probability of death in accidents. "NHTSA recorded 238 deaths due to airbags between 1990 and 2002, according to information about these deaths on their Web site," said Meyer. "They all occurred at very low speeds, with injuries that could not have been caused by anything else. But is it reasonable to conclude that airbags cause death only at very low speeds? It seems more likely that they also cause deaths at high speeds, but these are attributed to the crash. "For any given crash at high speed, we can't know what would have happened if there had been no airbag; however, statistical models allow us to look at patterns in the data, and compare risks in populations, in a variety of situations." The study was published this week in the magazine Chance. The new analysis directly contradicts earlier studies about the effectiveness of airbags, which have been required for drivers and front-seat passengers in all cars since the 1998 model year in the United States. While the value of airbags seems dubious in the new study, the value of seatbelts is not. The analysis found that proper use of a seatbelt reduces the odds of death by 67 percent for any given speed category and airbag availability. Airbags, however, cause no statistical difference in car-crash deaths, except for unseatbelted occupants at low speeds, where the odds of death are estimated to be more than four times higher with an airbag than without. It has been known for some time that airbags pose special risks to children and small women. Auto manuals routinely say young children, especially those in car seats, should not be put in front seats where they might be injured or killed by an inflating airbag. The reason earlier studies have found that airbags save lives is that they used only a special subset of the available data, said Meyer. The Fatality Analysis and Reporting System (FARS) is a high-quality compilation of information about every highway accident for which a death occurred. The Crashworthiness Data System (CDS) is another high-quality dataset, containing random samples of all accidents. The previous studies used FARS, and Meyer?s study used CDS. "When we look at the random sample of all accidents, we find that airbags are associated with increased risk of death," she said, "and this increase is due to more deaths with airbags in low-speed crashes and no seatbelts. However, if we limit the dataset to include only collisions in which a fatality occurred, we get a significantly reduced risk of death due to airbags." By way of analogy, the Meyer explained it this way: "If you look at people who have some types of cancer, you will see that those who get radiation treatment have a better chance of surviving than those who don?t. However, radiation is inherently dangerous and could actually cause cancer. If you give everyone radiation treatments, whether they have cancer or not, you will probably find an increased risk of death in the general population. "Making everyone have airbags and then verifying the effectiveness using only fatal crashes in FARS is like making everyone get radiation and then estimating the lives saved by looking only at people who have cancer. Overall, there will be more deaths if everyone is given radiation, but in the cancer subset, radiation will be effective." The new study directly contradicts assertions about airbag safety on the NHTSA Web site, said Meyer. The correct analysis is important to obtain now, because in only a few years, there will be virtually no cars on the road without airbags. "We are confident that our analyses better reflect the actual effectiveness of airbags in the general population [than earlier studies]," said Meyer. "The evidence shows that airbags do more harm than good."
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#1. To: Mr Nuke Buzzcut, *Consumer Alert* (#0)
It just gets better and better, doesn't it?
Pinguinite: The discussion forum preferred by Pinguins.
Yeah, better and better. They cried and whined about high center mounted taillights. They said it would eliminate all rear-end collisions. They said insurance would be cheaper...Rear-end collisions are still around. Insurance increased. They cried and whined about seatbelt laws. They said they would never arrest anybody for not wearing a seat belt only. They said automobile deaths would decrease. They said insurance would be cheaper...Seatbelt enforcement checkpoints are the norm now. Automobile deaths have not decreased proportionally. Insurance increased. They cried and whined about making insurance mandatory. They said insurance would be so cheap that it wouldn't even be a factor anymore...With the force of law behind them now, insurance is skyrocketing, if you can get it. They cried and whined about airbags...Well, you get the point. I hope.
And now they cry and whine for black box monitoring and GPS tracking.
I suppose the next step is to not allow citizens to drive their own cars, only licensed "experts" (like they've done with medicine, buying and selling stocks and bonds, dentistry, teaching, hair styling, flower arrainging, landscaping,...)
THAT'LL make things better. They're already equipping the police to be able to interrogate the on-board diagnostic (OBD) tattle-tale functions being installed in newer cars now, and using the information to arrest and prosecute drivers. GPS functions will only require a GPS chipset.
Trust the government, trust the medical establishment, trust the...
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