Roadside fatalities continue to rise despite technological advances

Improved auto safety features cannot mitigate driving while drunk or failures to use seatbelts.

Despite advances in vehicle technology, accidents continue to rise as drivers become more comfortable with texting, talking and driving. (Photo: Shutterstock)

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Even as automobiles are bundled with increasingly sophisticated safety features, roadside fatalities are rising. The growing number of accidents “is swamping the much-heralded beneficial impacts of newer, safer vehicles,” according to Robert Hartwig, an insurance professor at the Darla Moore School of Business at the University of South Carolina.

These technical advances include but are not limited to rearview cameras, collision-avoidance systems, adaptive cruise control, lane departure warning, airbags, anti-lock brake systems, electronic stability control, blind spot detection and head restraints.

With so much safety being built into motor vehicles, how can fatalities increase? According to an estimate released by the National Safety Council, a nonprofit safety advocacy group, roadside fatalities in 2016 reached 40,200. This was a 6% gain from 2015 and a 14% gain from 2014.

These findings begin to explain the confounding rise in roadside fatalities, despite additional safety features:

Analysts working for the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration joined in this reckoning by reporting increased roadside fatalities can be partially attributed to the fact more people are driving more miles due to job growth, the result of an improved economy. These analysts went onto cite three main causes of traffic fatalities:

The National Safety Council estimated automobile crashes cost about $432.5 billion in 2016, including those stemming from motor vehicle deaths, injuries and property damage. This astonishing amount equals nearly one-half of 2016 U.S. social security benefit payments.

The rising number and cost of vehicular accidents are exerting a significant effect on automobile liability insurance costs:

In addition to an increase in the number of roadside wrecks, the rising size of business automobile liability insurance claims is affecting several auto insurance companies’ bottom lines.

When considering why roadside fatalities are increasing despite improved automobile safety, remember that human behavior is unpredictable. Although the benefits of exercise are well known, many will walk past the gym on the way to purchase a hamburger and fries. Which one of us hasn’t chosen to forego an annual flu shot, while fully acknowledging the misery of a week spent in bed?

We who work in the claims community have an obligation to both our insureds and our employers to educate noncompliant motorists. Out-of-the-box thinking is needed to combat this out-of-the-park problem.

Gerry Sorge (gsorge@kmrdpartners.com) is a claims advocate at KMRD Partners, Inc., a Philadelphia-area risk and human capital management consulting and insurance brokerage firm serving clients worldwide.

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