Unbelted Rider in the Back Could Kill Someone in the Front

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This image from a crash test shows what happens in a 35 mph collision when a passenger in the back is unbelted. The rear-seat dummy is hurled forward into the back of the front seat, forcing the driver-seat dummy into the airbag and steering wheel. Research shows that in a frontal collision, the driver is more likely to be killed if the rear-seat passenger is unbelted. (Insurance Institute for Highway Safety)

By Cheryl Jensen,
FairWarning

People who don’t buckle up when they ride in the rear seat because they think it’s safer back there are wrong. Instead, they pose a serious danger to themselves and those riding up front, according to a new study and crash test video by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.

The video of that crash at 35 mph shows the unbelted test dummy flying forward and slamming into the rear of the front seat, which then forces the belted driver dummy into the air bag and steering wheel.

“That absolutely can have fatal consequences for both the rear seat passenger and the driver,” said Jessica Jermakian, a study co-author and senior research engineer with the insurance institute. Safety research shows that drivers are more than two times as likely to be killed in a crash if the occupant behind them is not wearing a seat belt, she said.

Seat belt use in the rear has consistently been lower than in the front seat for the last decade, Jermakian said.

Seat belts are proven lifesavers: When lap/shoulder belts are used, they reduce the risk of death to front seat occupants in a car by 45 percent. That increases to 60 percent in a light truck such as an SUV, pickup or van, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Similar figures are not available for the back seat.

However, almost half (400) of the 883 deaths of rear-seat passengers who were not wearing their seat belts could have been prevented by buckling up, estimates a 2015 study by the Governors Highway Safety Association.

‘The front seat is there to stop me’

It hasn’t been clear why fewer people buckle up in the rear seat because most research has focused on attitudes of people in front who don’t wear their seat belts. To find out, the insurance institute conducted a telephone survey of 1,172 people who had been rear-seat passengers in the past six months.

Of those, 91 percent said they always buckled up in the front seat, but only 72 percent said they always buckled up in the rear. The study focused on the 28 percent who said they used seat belts in the rear only some of the time or never.

The number one reason that people gave for not wearing their seat belt was that the back seat is safer so they don’t need to wear it, Jermakian said. Some surveyed said, “The front seat is there to stop me.” Others said, “I’m not going to go through the windshield.”

“When that front seat is stopping you, it’s also the front seat occupant that is stopping you,” Jermakian said. Historically, it has been safer in the back seat, she said, but that’s if people are belted in. “We did the simulated crash test because we wanted to show people what happens when you’re not belted. It not only puts them at risk, but it also impacts other people in the vehicle.”

Shrinking safety advantage

In the last few years some studies have shown that the relative safety advantage of riding in the back has begun to shrink, particularly for adults and in newer vehicles.

The reason the safety advantage is shrinking is that improvements have focused on the front seat, where most people ride. These include changes to front seat belts that reduce chest injuries, the addition of seat belt reminder chimes and structural improvements to better protect passengers in a frontal crash.

Some of the same improvements could migrate to the back but progress has been slow. Seat belt reminder systems, for example, have been credited with helping to increase belt use in the front. They are not required by the federal government for the rear seat, however, and few vehicles have them.

In the telephone survey, about three out of five people said they would be more likely to buckle up in back if there were an audible or visual reminder system like the one in front.

Yet it has been seven years since safety advocates petitioned the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration to require rear seat reminders, and five years since Congress directed the agency to develop a rule that would require the safety feature. Federal regulators have yet to begin that process.

“This is part of our ongoing regulatory review,” NHTSA said in an email to FairWarning. “The safe movement of the traveling public remains our top priority.”

This story was reported by FairWarning (www.fairwarning.org), a nonprofit news organization based in Pasadena, California, that focuses on public health, consumer and environmental issues.

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