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Traffic accident



         


Car accidents are accidental damaging events that involve automobiles that someone is driving. Damage can occur to one or more autos, people, or structures. Car accidents--also called traffic accidents, auto accidents, road accidents, and motor vehicle accidents--are responsible for thousands of deaths and hundreds of thousands of disabilities each year. Worldwide, 1 million people die each year in car accidents (a 2002 statistic).

There is a debate about the use of the word accident in the context of motor-vehicle incidents. Often the incident is the result of carelessness or deliberate dangerous driving, rather than of a circumstance that is totally beyond the control of one or more of those involved. Some road traffic safety authorities have started using alternative expressions such as car crashes in an attempt to educate and emphasise to drivers that these incidents are in many cases entirely avoidable. Further, in some areas (e.g. Victoria (Australia)), consideration is being given to counting single-vehicle single-occupant road traffic crash fatalities in that state's suicide statistics as well as the road-toll statistics.

Car makers have been accused of making cars that go too fast, and praised for the safety measures (such as ABS) found in new models.

Despite an ever-increasing safety level, both for cars and for roads, the number of accidents seems to remain more or less constant. Several explanations have been proposed:

Car accidents can be divided into some major categories:

Collisions can occur with other automobiles, other vehicles such as bicycles or trucks, with pedestrians, and with stationary structures or objects, such as trees or road signs.

In a collision between two cars, the car with less mass (and its occupants) are likely to suffer the most consequences. See: crash incompatibility.

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Rubbernecking

Rubbernecking is the behavior where drivers slow down their cars to watch what goes on near the highway. Events ranging from gruesome car accidents to a police car stopped on the shoulder can cause traffic jams on both side of the road, even if the roadway has been cleared.

Although caution is advised when there is unexpected activity on the side of a road, a car with a flat tire on the side of a highway often causes as much slow down as a real accident would due to rubbernecking. Traffic experts called this phenomenon Mothers Against Drunk Driving) is an organization made up of the families of the dead who were killed in car accidents caused by drunk drivers.








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