Question:

I need data or charts on car crashes in teen drivers- like this many teens died in this year and so on?

by  |  earlier

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i am doing a paper on teen crashes and cannot seem to find any data on this, like in 2005 50,000 teens died from a car crash and in 2006..... if you know this or know of a site that gives this or similar information you would be saving me a great deal of time headache thank you

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2 ANSWERS


  1. What class is this for?

    Where do you go to school?

    Who is your teacher?

    You want us to do your homework for you?

    If your teacher said you could use the internet to to your homework, I think she was thinking you'd use it for research, not to blatantly ask the public to do the work for you.

    What's going to happen to you when you grow up, and heaven forbid, have kids? You'll let them cheat on their school work? Maybe you'll help them cheat?

    Then what'll happen? They'll have kids and won't be able to help them cheat cause their parents always did it for them?

    What's the world coming to?

    This sounds to me like just another teen crash.

    Please start using just a bit more of those brains you were born with.

    I wish you well and success.


  2. This is as close as I can get.....................

    MARCH 2008

    Motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of death among 15- to 20-year olds.

    According to the U.S. Department of Transportation, 3,490 drivers in this age group died in motor vehicle crashes in 2006 and an additional 272,000 were injured.

    Drivers age 15- to 20-years old accounted for 12.9 percent of all the drivers involved in fatal crashes and 16 percent of all the drivers involved in police-reported crashes.

    Twenty-five percent of teen drivers killed were intoxicated. In 2002 (latest data available) the estimated economic cost of police-reported crashes involving drivers between the ages of 15 and 20 was $40.8 billion, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA,

    http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov ).

    Among licensed drivers, young people between the ages of 15 and 20 have the highest rate of fatal crashes relative to other age groups, including the elderly.

    In fact, the risk of being involved in a fatal crash for teens is three times greater than for drivers age 65 to 69

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