94 percent of transportation deaths are from motor vehicle crashes. Vehicle crashes also make up 99 percent of non-fatal transportation injuries.
Motor vehicle crashes account for more than 90% of all transportation-related fatalities.
20%
20%
Motor vehicle crashes
Side impact crashes account for approximately 27% of all motor vehicle crashes in the United States. These types of crashes typically result in a higher rate of serious injuries and fatalities due to the limited protection on the sides of vehicles.
Motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of unintentional injury-related teen fatalities each year. Factors such as inexperience, distracted driving, and impaired driving contribute to the high rate of teen deaths in motor vehicle accidents.
In the US in 2007, there were 37,435 fatal motor vehicle crashes (excluding motorcycles). 30,527 persons died as a result.
The number of alcohol related fatalities that were associated with motorcylce vehicle crashes in the twenty to twenty four age group in Flordia in 2008 was approximetaly twice that as it was in 2007.
What percent of drivers involved in lane change crashes claim they did not see the other vehicle?
63% of the children up to age 15 who were killed in motor vehicle crashes were killed in alcohol-related crashes. true or fales?
The following represents facts and figures regarding large truck accidents and the serious damages they inflict on our roadways every year. One out of eight traffic fatalities in 2005 resulted from a collision involving a large truck. In 2005, 442,000 large trucks (gross vehicle weight rating greater than 10,000 pounds) were involved in traffic crashes in the United States; 4,932 were involved in fatal crashes. A total of 5,212 people died (12 percent of all the traffic fatalities reported in 2005) and an additional 114,000 were injured in those crashes. In 2005, large trucks accounted for 8 percent of all vehicles involved in fatal crashes and 4 percent of all vehicles involved in injury and property-damage-only crashes.