Like Falling Out of a Building
At just 30 mph, a person not wearing a seat belt in a crash has the same experience as falling from a 3-story building or getting rammed by a 3.5 ton elephant.
At just 30 mph, a person not wearing a seat belt in a crash has the same experience as falling from a 3-story building or getting rammed by a 3.5 ton elephant.
There are actually three collisions in every crash: the vehicle collision; the human collision; and the internal collision (inside your body).
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Three Collisions in a Crash - For Your Safety and Awareness
You're not the only one who will get hurt if you're not wearing your seatbelt in a crash. Unbuckled bodies can collide at crash force into other people in the same vehicle seriously injuring or even killing them.
The impact to your body in a crash is called crash force. Crash force is equal to your body weight multiplied by the speed of the vehicle.
Try it - calculate your crash force:
If you hold your child while riding in a vehicle, you could crush the child during a crash. In a 30 mph crash, a 100 pound adult becomes a 3,000 pound force against the child. That is why it's important for each passenger in a vehicle to be independently and properly restrained with a seatbelt or a child restraint.
For many serious injuries, the first hour of care is critical. However, response time is greater in rural areas due to factors such as distance and geography. If you are seriously injured, will EMTs reach you in time? If you buckle up, you are less likely to suffer a serious injury and you have a much better chance of surviving until EMTs reach you.