The New York Times

September 1, 2003 


Much more on airbags in: Chapter 11

Occupant protection

Chapter 12

Airbag benefits, airbag costs

Chapter 15

The dramatic failure of US safety policy

of

published August 2004

• USA TODAY opinion piece, U.S. Traffic Safety Misleads the Public: As GM ignition case shows, technology is emphasized over driver behavior, Sept.2014

• AJPH Editorial 20,000  more Americans killed annually because US traffic-safety policy rejects science. Aug. 2014

• 1991 book Traffic Safety and the driver available as Paperback and Kindle (scanned printed pages - not searchable)

• Information on 2004 book  

• How to Purchase Traffic Safety

• Latest Additions

• Leonard Evans - Bio
   (Publications, talks, PowerPoints, etc)

 Extra Publications

• Editorials

• Alcohol Calculator

• Presentations

• Specific Topics

• Visit to Titanic

• Personal

• Photographs

• Super-8 Family Movies

Sidebar Updated 2022-01-05

 

Make Air Bags a Choice

To the Editor:

Re "Fear of Air Bag Sends Children to Back Seat, Saving Many" (news article, Aug. 27) quotes the chairwoman of the National Transportation Safety Board as saying, "Old air bag, new air bag, no air bag, kids are safer in the back seat properly restrained."

True. But it's equally true that adults are safer in the back seat. An adult moving from a front to a rear seat enjoys a 26 percent fatality-risk reduction, far more than the 8 percent reduction from air bags. Children are placed in rear seats to avoid being killed by air bags.

We need effective policies aimed at crash prevention, not publicity campaigns aimed at preventing children from being killed by air bags when crashes occur. This can be achieved by simply making air bags a consumer choice, rather than a government mandate.

LEONARD EVANS

Bloomfield Hills, Mich., Aug. 27, 2003