APP Users: If unable to download, please re-install our APP.
Only logged in User can create notes
Only logged in User can create notes

General Studies 3 >> Security Issues

audio may take few seconds to load

SEATBELT SAFETY 

SEATBELT SAFETY 

Source: The Hindu 

Context

The death of Cyrus P. Mistry, former chairman of Tata Sons, in a car crash in Maharashtra's Palghar district on September 4.
It has turned the focus on whether compulsory use of seat belts in cars including by passengers in the rear seat can save lives during such accidents.
 

Seat belt-Lifesaver

  • The focus in the aftermath is on the seat belt. The three-point seat belt was engineered by Nils Evar Bohlin, a passive safety device first incorporated into a car by Volvo in 1959.
  • Now standard in cars sold in India is a low-cost restraint system that prevents occupants of a vehicle from being thrown forward in a crash.
  • In the U.S, unrestrained drivers and passengers represented 48 per cent of all deaths in vehicle crashes in 2016, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
  • In a car crash, particularly at moderate to high speeds, the driver or passenger who has no seat belt continues to move forward at the speed of the vehicle until some object stops the occupant.
  • This could be the steering wheel, dashboard or windscreen for those in front and the front seat, dashboard or windscreen for those in the rear.
 
The Centre for Road Safety at the Transport Department of New South Wales, Australia (NSW Centre), which has had a compulsory seat belt rule since 1971 explains that "even if the vehicle is fitted with an airbag, the force at which an unrestrained occupant strikes the airbag can cause serious injuries.
 
  • Without an airbag and no seat belt restraint, a severe crash leads to the occupant of the rear seat striking the seat in front with such force that "it is sufficient for the seat mountings and seat structures to fail," says the NSW Centre.
  • The seat belt performs many functions, notably slowing the occupant at the same rate as the vehicle, distributing the physical force in a crash across the stronger parts of the body such as the pelvis and chest, and preventing collisions with objects within the vehicle and sudden ejection.
  • Newer technologies to "pretension" the belt, sense sudden pull forces and apply only as much force as is necessary to safely hit the airbags.
The absence of seat belts could lead to rear seat occupants colliding with internal objects in the car or even being ejected through the front windscreen during the collision.
 

Role of head restraints 

  • Head restraints are found either as adjustable models or moulded into the seats, to prevent a whiplash injury.
  • This type of injury occurs mostly when the vehicle is struck from behind, leading to sudden extreme movement of the neck backwards and then forwards.
  • It could also happen vice versa in other circumstances.
  • The injury involves the muscles, vertebral discs, nerves and tendons of the neck, says Johns Hopkins Medicine and is manifested as neck stiffness, pain, numbness, ringing in the ears, blurred vision and sleeplessness among others.
  • The head restraint built into the seat must be properly placed and aligned with the neck, to prevent injury in a vehicle accident.
  • A study done by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) in the U.S. estimated that claims for neck injuries were lower by 11 per cent when the seats and restraints were rated good by it, compared to those rated poor.
  • The rating system has resulted in newer models, since 2015, almost fully getting a good rating.

Regulations in India 

  • On February 11, 2022, the Ministry of Road Transport and Highways issued a draft notification providing for three-point seat belts to be provided in all vehicles coming under the M1 Category, 
  • It is for carriage of passengers comprising not more than eight seats in addition to the driver's seat, for vehicles manufactured from October 1.
  • Also, it stipulated relevant Indian Standards to be followed by the manufacturers for both seat belts and reminder systems alerting occupants to wear them.
 

The Amended Motor Vehicles Act of 2019

  • The occupants of a passenger vehicle require to wear a seat belt.
  • As per Section 194 (B) of the Act, whoever drives a motor vehicle without wearing a safety belt or carrying passengers not wearing seat belts shall be punishable with a fine of one thousand rupees.
  • Although cars are equipped with seat belts, enforcement for rear seat occupants is virtually absent in India.
  • The U.S. research findings published in the Journal of Safety Research show that seat belt use was low in states with weak laws or no laws at all and riders of taxi services are high-risk groups.
  • The IIHS study found that the rear seat passengers who did not buckle up were eight times more likely to suffer serious injuries than those who did.
 

Discussion in Parliament 

  • The toll from non-compliance in India is high, as taxicabs often have missing seat belts.
  • In one of the few questions on the subject asked in Parliament, the Road Transport Ministry said, in 2017, a shocking 26,896 people lost their lives due to the non-use of seat belts and 16,876 of them were passengers.
  • No specific data about loss of lives due to non-usage of seat belts for rear seat passengers are available with the Ministry.
In the aftermath of the accident in which Cyrus Mistry died and there have been suggestions that automotive technology should bring about compliance by making it impossible to operate the vehicle if seat belts are not fastened.
 
 

Conclusion 

  • As of July, the European Union's General Safety Regulation requires new vehicles to incorporate advanced emergency braking technology that launches automatically when a collision is imminent and intelligent speed assistance to reduce speed suitably besides accident event recorders, all of which are relevant to the Palghar crash.
  • Making high-quality dash cameras standard in cars could be a start to help record accidents and establish the cause.
 



Share to Social