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Higher U.S. speed limit linked to 12,500 more deaths

2009-07-29 06:18:42

By Anne Harding Anne Harding Tue Jul 28, 1:35 pm ET

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) Higher speed limits led to about 12,500 more deaths

on US roads between 1995 and 2005, a new study in the American Journal of

Public Health shows.

Earlier studies had suggested that any effects of an act of Congress that

eliminated all federal controls on speed limits would be temporary. The

findings debunk those claims, Dr. Lee S. Friedman of the University of Illinois

in Chicago, one of the study's authors, told Reuters Health.

To date, Friedman and his team note in their report, most studies of the

effects of speed limit changes on highway fatalities and injuries have looked

at only a couple of years' worth of data, in only a few states. In their

analysis, the researchers looked at traffic fatalities in every US state except

Massachusetts and Hawaii over the decade after the change in Federal law.

The National Maximum Speed Law, passed in 1974, put a 55 mph speed limit on all

interstate roads. The law was intended to cut fuel consumption in the wake of

the 1973 oil embargo, but it also led to a 16.4% reduction in car crash

mortality from 1973 to 1974, Friedman and his colleagues note in their report.

In 1987, Congress passed the Surface Transportation and Uniform Relocation

Assistance Act allowing states to lift the speed limit on rural interstates to

65 mph, which 41 states did. In 1995, Congress passed the National Highway

Designation Act, which wiped out all federal speed limits.

Overall, Friedman and his team found that increased speed limits led to a 3.2%

jump in road deaths. On rural interstates, car crash deaths increased 9.1%,

while the increase for urban interstates was 4%.

The biggest increases in deaths due to increased speed limits were seen in

states that had 55 mph speed limits before 1995 and raised them to 65

afterwards.

In states that kept the same speed limits, the number of deaths and injuries in

fatal car crashes actually declined.

Overall, Friedman and his colleagues estimate that the federal law change led

to 12,545 more deaths on US highways, and 36,583 more injuries in fatal

crashes.

Bringing back a federal speed limit could not only save lives, Friedman noted;

it could also reduce carbon emissions and dependence on foreign oil. The

Surface Transportation and Uniform Relocation Assistance Act is coming up for

renewal this November, which could offer an opportunity to put a new federal

speed limit in place, he said.

More speed cameras could also help make roads safer, Friedman added. These are

automated systems that take photos of speeders and their license plates, and

then send the offender a ticket in the mail.

"You don't have the fun of having a police officer pull you over and take your

license," Friedman said. Nevertheless, he added, "these systems are very

effective for reducing and controlling systematic speeding."

SOURCE: American Journal of Public Health, September 2009.