| Article ID: | iaor19981039 |
| Country: | United Kingdom |
| Volume: | 29 |
| Issue: | 3 |
| Start Page Number: | 313 |
| End Page Number: | 319 |
| Publication Date: | May 1997 |
| Journal: | Accident Analysis and Prevention |
| Authors: | Grossman David C., Sugarman Jonathan R., Fox Caroline, Moran John |
| Keywords: | transportation: road, risk |
The rates of motor-vehicle crash mortality are highest among American Indians and Alaska Natives, compared to other ethnic groups. The aim of this study was to compare risk factors for motor-vehicle crashes and occupant injuries between rural and urban American-Indian (AI) drivers, and between rural AI and non-AI rural drivers. A statewide traffic-accident database was linked to the Indian Health Service patient-registration database to identify crashes that involved American-Indian drivers. Using a cross-sectional design, crashes occurring in a two-county region during 1989 and 1990 were studied. A total of 9329 motor-vehicle crashes involving 16,234 drivers and 6431 passengers were studied. Two percent of drivers were American Indian. Compared to American-Indian drivers in urban crashes, rural crashes involving American-Indian drivers were more likely to result in injury or death (38% vs 64%,