One-third of people killed in teen drivers’ wrecks aren’t teens

WASHINGTON – About one-third of the people killed in automobile crashes involving the nation’s youngest drivers were pedestrians or occupants of other vehicles, according to a report released Wednesday.

An analysis of federal crash statistics by the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety found that nearly 31,000 people were killed in crashes involving drivers between the ages of 15 and 17 between 1995 and 2004.

The foundation said it was surprised to learn that one-third of those deaths involved pedestrians and people in other vehicles.

“While we may think of this as being a teen driver problem, it really affects a much broader audience,” said Robert Darbelnet, AAA president and chief executive.

Safety groups said the statistics highlight the need for states to strengthen laws involving graduated licensing programs, which place restrictions upon beginning drivers and outline training programs.

“Highway safety programs to date have largely focused on the effects of these crashes on the teen drivers themselves, but this analysis shows that programs need to focus on the impact on others as well,” said Lt. Col. Jim Champagne, chairman of the Governors Highway Safety Association.

The report found that of the 30,917 deaths during the span, 11,177, or 36.2 percent, were the teen drivers. The death toll included 9,847 passengers of the teen drivers, or 31.8 percent; 7,477 occupants of other vehicles operated by drivers at least 18 years of age, or 24.2 percent; and 2,323 pedestrians and bicyclists, or 7.5 percent. There were 93 fatalities in which the ages of the victims were unknown.

Every state has some form of a graduated licensing program, but they vary in scope. Darbelnet said programs the foundation considers comprehensive include at least 50 hours of supervised driving with an adult, restrictions on the time of day when a beginning driver can use a vehicle and limits on the number of passengers in the vehicle without a supervising adult.

Safety groups say distractions and risks grow sharply for teen drivers at night and when they travel with their friends.

“Regardless of what the state law says, parents should not allow their teen to ride with other teen drivers, nor should they be allowed to transport other teens in the first year of driving,” Darbelnet said.

Kathy Fowler, 37, a medical reporter for WJLA-TV in Washington, D.C., survived a crash on a rural road in Ohio when she was 18. Two other people were killed in the accident.

“I guess as teenagers you think you’re invincible, immortal,” she said. “None of us realized back then that something we did in a split second could have such a lifelong impact and create so much pain for so many people.”

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