Car Safety: Ratings, websites, and articles
- Overall Crashworthiness Evaluations
- MINI CARS: Current models LINK
- SMALL CARS: Current models LINK
- SMALL CARS: Overall Crashworthiness Evaluations of earlier models LINK
- MIDSIZE MODERATELY PRICED CARS: Current models LINK
- MIDSIZE MODERATELY PRICED CARS: Earlier models LINK
- SMALL SUVs: Current models LINK
- SMALL SUVs: Earlier models LINK
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- Rear crash protection: Toyota LINK
Current Cars
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2003 Toyota Corolla |
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1998 Toyota Camry |
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1994 Honda Accord |
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1998 Toyota Camry ???
1994 Honda Accord ??? ???
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2006 Toyota Prius |
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By JAN DENNIS, Associated Press Writer
Tue Jan 3, 7:32 AM ET
BLOOMINGTON, Ill. - Children are no safer riding in sport utility vehicles than in passenger cars, largely because the doubled risk of rollovers in SUVs cancels out the safety advantages of their greater size and weight, according to a study.
Researchers said the findings dispel the bigger-equals-safer myth that has helped fuel the growing popularity of SUVs among families. SUV registrations climbed 250 percent in the United States between 1995 and 2002.
"We're not saying they're worse or that they're terrible vehicles. We're challenging the conventional wisdom that everyone assumed they were better," said Dr. Dennis Durbin, a pediatric emergency physician who took part in the study, published Tuesday in the journal Pediatrics.
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The study, which Durbin called the first on SUVs and child safety, was sponsored by Partners for Child Passenger Safety, a research project of Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and the world's largest insurer, Bloomington-based State Farm Insurance Co.
The researchers looked at accidents involving nearly 4,000 children under age 16 between 2000 and 2003, and found child injury rates of about 1.7 percent in both cars and SUVs. The study examined only 1998 or newer cars and SUVs with second-generation air bags.
On average, the SUVs weighed 1,300 pounds more than the cars studied. The study found that the extra weight of SUVs enhanced safety, reducing the risk of injury by more than a third.
But that was offset by findings that SUVs were more than twice as likely as cars to roll over in crashes.
Children in rollovers were three times more likely to be seriously injured than those in non-rollover accidents, according to the study.
The findings surprised researchers, who assumed heavier SUVs were safer than cars when they launched the study a year ago, Durbin said.
SUV safety will probably improve because of legislation approved by Congress this year that requires the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration to develop standards for automakers to address SUV rollovers, he said.
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NHTSA spokesman Rae Tyson agreed but said he hopes the study will encourage families to check safety ratings closely before buying.
"I think there is a segment of the buying public that may be buying them with the false impression that they are buying the safest vehicle they can for their families," Tyson said.