锘?html> CDC - Media Relations - Press Release - February 17, 2005
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        Fact Sheet

        Embargoed until
        February 17, 2005, 12 PM EDT
        Contact: CDC Injury Center
        Media Relations (770) 488-4902

        Motor Vehicle Backover Injury Among Children and Youth鈥? United States, 2001-2003

        Motor vehicle backover-related injuries pose a serious risk to children and youth with an estimated 7,475 children from ages one to 14 years treated in U.S. emergency departments between 2001 and 2003 for nonfatal backover-related injuries. CDC researchers found that half of the children injured were ages one to four years old. Most backover-related injuries took place at home or on public property with 40% of incidents reported in driveways or parking lots. While the majority (78%) of cases were treated and released from the emergency departments, motor vehicles backing over children and youth pose a substantial risk for severe injury and death. Alerting parents and caretakers to this risk makes it possible for them to take simple steps to protect children from backover-related injuries. Additionally, prevention measures ranging from environmental modifications, like fencing off driveways, to changes in vehicle design, like extra mirrors or sensing devices, may reduce the risk of backover-related injuries to children and youth and should be evaluated.

        Key Findings Include:

        • Pedestrians who were standing, sitting, playing, or walking near or behind a motor vehicle were six times more likely to be backed over by a vehicle than bicyclists or tricyclists.
           
        • Injuries occurred predominantly to arms and legs (53.6%) and to the head, face, and neck region (28.0%).
           
        • More than half (56%) of all injuries were minor contusions and abrasions; the occurrence of these minor contusions and abrasions increased with age, from 49.4% among one to four year-olds to 62.5% among 10-14 year olds. More serious injuries including fractures and internal injuries decreased with age from 39.5% among children aged one to four years to 17.5% among children aged 10 to 14 years.

        Prevention Strategies:

        • Public education may increase awareness among parents and caregivers and encourage adults to adequately supervise children and youth who are playing in areas near parked motor vehicles; motivate drivers to look carefully for children and youth before backing up; and prompt owners to lock motor vehicles in garages or driveways and to always keep the keys out of the reach of children and youth.
           
        • Proposed environmental modifications include fencing driveways off from the rest of the yard; providing fenced play areas away from the driveway and street; and redesigning drives to be circular to eliminate the need to back out. Those modifications that prove effective should be implemented.
           
        • Automobile modifications may also play a role in preventing backover-related injuries among children and youth and should be evaluated for their effectiveness. Possible changes include back-up warning alarms when a vehicle is placed in reverse and the use of mirrors or sensing devices that would alert the driver to an out-of-sight object, such as a small child, when backing the vehicle.

        This MMWR article is available online at:
        http://www.cy118119.com/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5406a2.htm

        For additional information from CDC鈥檚 National Center for Injury Prevention and Control visit: http://www.cy118119.com/ncipc.

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        This page last updated February 17, 2005
        URL: http://www.cy118119.com/media/pressrel/fs050217.htm

        United States Department of Health and Human Services
        Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
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        Division of Media Relations

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