Motor vehicle accidents between 1997 and 2005

He was hit while lying on driveway at his home

Published: Friday, July 31, 2009 11:22 p.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 

Between 1997 and 2005

Thirty-six Utah children under age 10 were killed when either hit or run over by a motor vehicle on private property.

Twenty-four were killed in residential driveways.

In more than half the deaths, the driver was a family member.

Children under 5 are most at risk; they accounted for 29 of the 36 deaths.

About 70 percent of deaths occurred with a vehicle moving in reverse.

About 2 children are killed each week in the United States by back-overs.

Preventive steps:

Walk completely around your vehicle before starting.

Know where the children are while backing; have them sit or stand where they can be seen.

Roll down your window so you can better hear outside your vehicle.

Be especially cautious with vans, SUVs and trucks; about 80 percent of deaths involve larger-type vehicles.

Source: Utah Department of Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

previousnext

Latest comments

What a horrible way to pass away. Prayers for the family!

Editorial: Who wants ethics reform?

Philip - I hate to tell you this, but many active registered Republicans...

Don't underestimate gratitude

I think Brother Coppin's articles are much better when he stays away from...

Rivalry Week is highly profane

are for trading insults. We all need to get a bit thicker skin while at the...

Nice. Could not get into the cool clubs so you start you own. I give them an...

I never thought Nutty Putty was dangerous. I went there 3 times as a...

Can't they jackhammer the walls of the cave to get him out? I'd want him...

BYU's old uniforms?

For the sake of us football fans that have historical perspective please be...

What a great story. I've had the opportunity to watch one of these young men...

Rivalry Week is highly profane

The increasing profane behavior, trash talk, and hate (by far too many on...

Advertisements