Motor vehicle accidents are currently the third leading cause of death due to unintentional injury after falls and accidental drug overdose.

Between 2006 and 2010, there were 1,516 Connecticut residents who died in motor vehicle crashes,  including motor vehicle occupants, motorcyclists, bicyclists and pedestrians. motorvehicleaccidentFrom 2007 to 2013, motor vehicle crashes resulted in 14,012 hospital in-patient discharges, 191,984 emergency room visits and over $444 million in emergency department charges.

Many of these deaths and non-fatal injuries can be prevented.

 

 

The Connecticut Department of Public Health recommends the following important steps to protect yourself, your family and community:

 Wear a seat belt on every trip; 

Make sure children ride in properly installed car seats or booster seats appropriate for their size and age. For a fitting station near you, visit http://www.ctsafekids.org/fittingstations.htm

Wear bicycle and motorcycle helmets;

Avoid using electronic devices or doing other activities in the car that distract you from driving;

Don’t drink and drive or let others drive after drinking; and

Walk facing oncoming traffic and wear highly visible reflective clothing if walking at night

 

Parents can make a major difference in keeping their teenagers safe by discussing the rules of the road, creating a parent-teen safe driving contract, monitoring their teen’s driving, and learning and enforcing Connecticut’s teen driving laws, which include restrictions on two of the most risky situations for young drivers; driving at night and driving with other teen passengers.

 

For the summary of Connecticut’s law on Graduated Driver Licensing, please click the link: SUMMARY: CONNECTICUT GRADUATED DRIVER LICENSING LAW

 

Child Passenger Safety

 

CDC Motor Vehicle Safety

 

 

Preventive Health and Health Services Block Grant

 

The Preventive Health and Health Services Block Grant (PHHSBG) provides all 50 states, the District of Columbia, 2 American Indian tribes, and 8 US territories with funding to address their unique public health needs in innovative and locally defined ways. This program gives grantees the flexibility to use funds to respond rapidly to emerging health issues and to fill funding gaps in programs that deal with leading causes of death and disability.

PHHSBG funding is currently provided to local health departments to address motor vehicle injury through activities designed to increase the correct use of safety belts/child safety seats and promote pedestrian safety.  Strategies utilized include: safety seat checkup events; training programs for parents, caregivers and health professionals; community awareness campaigns; and development of community coalitions to identify local problems and implement environmental or policy changes to address these problems.

 

Links:

 

Motor vehicle accidents in the US: Costly but preventable - http://www.cdc.gov/vitalsigns/pdf/2014-10-vitalsigns.pdf

 

Cost of deaths from motor vehicle crashes in Connecticut- http://www.cdc.gov/Motorvehiclesafety/pdf/fatal_crash_cost/ct_costofcrashdeaths.pdf

Adult Seat Belt Use in the US: http://www.ct.gov/dph/lib/dph/hems/injury/seatbeltuse_factsheet.pdf

Child Passenger Safety: http://www.cdc.gov/vitalsigns/pdf/2014-02-vitalsigns.pdf

 

 

For more information, please call

The  Office of Injury Prevention 

(860) 509-8251