Here are some important statistics on trucking accidents for victims, or loved ones of victims in a passenger vehicle involved in a semi truck accident:
- 123,918 trucks were involved in non-fatal accidents in 2008.
- Out of the 41,000-45,000 traffic deaths that occur in the US every year, less about 8% involve commercial trucks.
- 3,944 fatal trucking crashes occurred in 2008.
- Large trucks are more likely to be involved in fatal crashes than passenger vehicles.
- Most fatal truck accidents occur in rural areas during the daytime.
- Every 16 minutes a person is injured or killed in accidents involving semi-trucks, tractor-trailers or 18-wheelers.
Common Causes of Innocent Passenger Vehicle Victims Involved In A Crash with a Semi Truck or Commercial Vehicle Crash
Unsafe acts caused by semi trucks, commercial vehicles, or tractor trailer trucks can cause accidents, injuries and sometimes even death. Frequent reasons for a semi truck, or commercial vehicle accident involving innocent victims in a passenger vehicle include: The semi truck, or commercial vehicle was:
- Traveling too fast
- Involved in an Improper lane change
- The truck driver had Highway or roadway unfamiliarity
- Semi Truck driver Fatigue
- The Semi Truck, or Commercial Truck Driver was Distracted or talking on a cell phone
- The Semi Truck, or Commercial Vehicle Was Involved In Illegal maneuvers
- The Semi Truck Had An Improperly secured load
- The Semi Truck, or Commercial Truck Driver was driving too Aggressively
- The Semi Truck, or Commercial Vehicle Driver had Alcohol/Drug/Prescription drug use issues
- The Semi Truck, or Commercial Vehicle had Tire tread separation or tire blowouts
- The Semi Truck, or Commercial Vehicle Driver was Overdriving for current weather conditions
- The Semi Truck, or Commercial Vehicle driver lost control of the truck because of Lack of trailer control/Jackknifing
A traffic accident involving a large commercial truck, such as an semi truck, or an 18 wheeler can have tragic consequences for an automobile driver, or their passengers. A typical fully loaded large commercial truck can weigh over 80,000 pounds, while an average passenger automobile weighs approximately 3,000 pounds. Because of the sheer size of trucks, any collision between a commercial truck and another vehicle is likely to result in serious, even fatal, injuries.
THE LARGE TRUCK CRASH CAUSATION STUDY (LTCCS) The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) conducted the Large Truck Crash Causation Study (LTCCS) to examine the reasons for serious crashes involving large trucks (trucks with a gross vehicle weight rating over 10,000 pounds). From the 120,000 large truck crashes that occurred between April 2001 and December 2003, a nationally representative sample was selected. Each crash in the LTCCS sample involved at least one large truck and resulted in a fatality or injury. The total LTCCS sample of 963 crashes involved 1,123 large trucks and 959 motor vehicles that were not large trucks. The 963 crashes resulted in 249 fatalities and 1,654 injuries. Of the 1,123 large trucks in the sample, 77 percent were tractors pulling a single semi-trailer, and 5 percent were trucks carrying hazardous materials. Of the 963 crashes in the sample, 73 percent involved a large truck colliding with at least one other vehicle.
Defining Causation Motor vehicle crashes are complex events. Usually they involve two or more vehicles. Elements that influence the occurrence of a crash may take place hours, days, or months before the crash. They include driver training and experience, vehicle design and manufacture, highway condition and traffic signaling, and weather conditions. Other elements may take place immediately before a crash, such as a decision to turn in traffic, a tire blowout, or snow. Crash reconstruction experts rarely conclude that crashes are the result of a single factor. Fatigue, drinking alcohol, and speeding are major factors in motor vehicle crashes overall. Although their presence does not always result in a crash, these three factors, as well as other driver, vehicle, and environmental factors, can increase the risk that a crash will occur. In the LTCCS, ‘causation’ is defined in terms of the factors that are most likely to increase the risk that large trucks will be involved in serious crashes.
Data Collection Data for the 963 crashes in the LTCCS sample were collected at 24 sites in 17 States. A crash researcher and a State truck inspector traveled to each crash site as soon as possible after the crash occurred. The researchers collected crash scene data through interviews with drivers, passengers, and witnesses, and the inspectors conducted thorough inspections of the trucks, the drivers’ logbooks, and other documentation. After leaving the crash scene, the researchers collected additional data through interviews with motor carriers and, when the actual drivers could not be interviewed, surrogate drivers. The researchers also reviewed police crash reports, hospital records, and coroners’ reports and revisited the crash scenes. For each crash, data were collected on up to 1,000 elements, including the condition of the truck driver and the other drivers involved before the crash; the drivers’ behavior during the crash; the condition of the trucks and other vehicles; roadway factors; and weather conditions. Data were coded by crash experts, difficult cases were reviewed by FMCSA and NHTSA staff, and completed cases were put into a publicly available electronic database on FMCSA’s Web site.
National Crash Estimates According to NHTSA’s estimate, there were approximately 120,000 fatal and injury crashes nationwide during the 33-month study period that involved at least one large truck; 141,000 large trucks were involved in those crashes. Each of the 963 LTCCS study cases was assigned a sampling weight, which allows for national estimates of total fatal and injury truck crashes during the study period. All study results presented here are national estimates for the 141,000 large trucks that were estimated by NHTSA to have been involved in fatal and injury crashes during the study period. The estimates may differ from true values, because they are based on a probability sample of crashes and not a census of all crashes. The size of the difference may vary, depending on which LTCCS sample is the focus of a particular table or analysis.
Coding Crash Causation Variables Many variables were coded from the hundreds of data elements collected on each crash. Three key variables were coded for assessing crash risk:
- Critical Event: The action or event that put the vehicle or vehicles on a course that made the collision unavoidable. The critical event is assigned to the vehicle that took the action that made the crash inevitable.
- Critical Reason: The immediate reason for the critical event (i.e., the failure leading to the critical event). The critical reason is assigned to the vehicle coded with the critical event in the crash. It can be coded as a driver error, vehicle failure, or environmental condition (roadway or weather).
- Associated Factors: The person, vehicle, and environmental conditions present at the time of the crash. No judgment is made as to whether any factor is related to the reason for a particular crash, just whether the factor was present. The list of the many factors that can be coded provides enough information to describe the circumstances of the crash.
Critical Events Three major types of critical events were assigned to large trucks:
- Running out of the travel lane, either into another lane or off the road (32 percent of the large trucks in the LTCCS sample were assigned this critical event)
- Vehicle loss of control due to traveling too fast for conditions, cargo shift, vehicle systems failure, poor road conditions, or other reasons (29 percent)
- Colliding with the rear end of another vehicle in the truck’s travel lane (22 percent).
Critical Reasons The percentage of large trucks coded with a critical reason depends on the type of crash:
- Of the large trucks involved in all LTCCS crashes (single-vehicle and multi-vehicle), 55 percent were assigned the critical reason in crashes.
- Of the large trucks involved in two-vehicle LTCCS crashes between one truck and one passenger vehicle (a car, van, pickup truck, or sport utility vehicle), 44 percent were assigned the critical reason.
Table 1 Estimated Numbers of Trucks in All Crashes, by Critical Reasons
Critical Reasons | Number of Trucks | Percent of Total |
Driver | 68,000 | 87% |
Non-Performance | 9,000 | 12% |
Recognition | 22,000 | 28% |
Decision | 30,000 | 38% |
Performance | 7,000 | 9% |
Vehicle | 8,000 | 10% |
Environment | 2,000 | 3% |
Total Number of Large Trucks Coded with Critical Reason | 78,000 | 100% |
Total Number of Large Trucks Not Coded with Critical Reason | 63,000 | — |
Total Number of Large Trucks Involved in Crashes | 141,000 | — |
Notes: Results shown are national estimates for the 141,000 large trucks estimated to have been involved in fatal and injury crashes during the study period. The estimates may differ from true values, because they are based on a probability sample of crashes and not a census of all crashes. Estimates are rounded to the nearest 1,000 large trucks.
Driver critical reasons are coded in four categories:
- Non-Performance: The driver fell asleep, was disabled by a heart attack or seizure, or was physically impaired for another reason.
- Recognition: The driver was inattentive, was distracted by something inside or outside the vehicle, or failed to observe the situation adequately for some other reason.
- Decision: For example, the driver was driving too fast for conditions, misjudged the speed of other vehicles, or followed other vehicles too closely.
- Performance: For example, the driver panicked, overcompensated, or exercised poor directional control.
Associated Factors Hundreds of associated factors were collected for each vehicle in each crash. In descending order, the top 10 factors coded for large trucks and their drivers were:
- Brake problems
- Traffic flow interruption (congestion, previous crash)
- Prescription drug use
- Traveling too fast for conditions
- Unfamiliarity with roadway
- Roadway problems
- Required to stop before crash (traffic control device, crosswalk)
- Over-the-counter drug use
- Inadequate surveillance
- Fatigue.
Relative Risk Relative risk analysis of the data on associated factors, using the critical event and critical reason coding, allows the sorting out of factors into those merely present at the time of the crash and those that increase the risk of having a crash. The trucks involved in LTCCS crashes can be divided into two groups: those that were assigned the critical event and critical reason and those that were not. When the presence of associated factors coded to the two groups is compared, the relative risk of each factor can be assessed, as the following examples illustrate:
- If 30 percent of the trucks assigned the critical reason for a crash were coded with the driver associated factor ‘traveling too fast for conditions,’ while only 5 percent of the trucks that were not assigned the critical reason were coded with the same associated factor, it can be concluded that speed is a factor that increases the risk of being involved in a crash.
- If 30 percent of the trucks assigned the critical reason for a crash were coded with the driver associated factor ‘prescription drug use,’ while 30 percent of the trucks that were not assigned the critical reason were also coded with the same associated factor, it can be concluded that prescription drug use is not a factor that increases the risk of being involved in a crash.
Table 2 shows the 19 associated factors that were coded most frequently for large trucks in the LTCCS, where there was a statistically significant association between the factor and the assignment of the critical reason. The order of the factors in the table is based on the number and percentage of trucks assessed with each factor. The relative risk number is a ratio of the critical reason coding for trucks coded with the factor, compared with trucks not coded with the factor. Thus, Table 2 shows that a truck with brake problems was 170 percent more likely to be coded with the critical reason for a crash than a truck that was not coded with the brake problems associated factor.
Table 2 Associated Factors Assigned in Large Truck Crashes and Their Relative Risk Importance
Factors | Number of Trucks | Percent of Total | Relative Risk |
Vehicle: Brake problems | 41,000 | 29% | 2.7 |
Driver: Traveling too fast for conditions | 32,000 | 23% | 7.7 |
Driver: Unfamiliar with roadway | 31,000 | 22% | 2.0 |
Environment: Roadway problems | 29,000 | 20% | 1.5 |
Driver: Over-the-counter drug use | 25,000 | 17% | 1.3 |
Driver: Inadequate surveillance | 20,000 | 14% | 9.3 |
Driver: Fatigue | 18,000 | 13% | 8.0 |
Driver: Felt under work pressure from carrier | 16,000 | 10% | 4.7 |
Driver: Made illegal maneuver | 13,000 | 9% | 26.4 |
Driver: Inattention | 12,000 | 9% | 17.1 |
Driver: External distraction | 11,000 | 8% | 5.1 |
Vehicle: Tire problems | 8,000 | 6% | 2.5 |
Driver: Following too close | 7,000 | 5% | 22.6 |
Driver: Jackknife | 7,000 | 5% | 4.7 |
Vehicle: Cargo shift | 6,000 | 4% | 56.3 |
Driver: Illness | 4,000 | 3% | 34.0 |
Driver: Internal distraction | 3,000 | 2% | 5.8 |
Driver: Illegal drugs | 3,000 | 2% | 1.8 |
Driver: Alcohol | 1,000 | 1% | 5.3 |
Notes: Results shown are national estimates for the 141,000 large trucks estimated to have been involved in fatal and injury crashes during the study period. The estimates may differ from true values, because they are based on a probability sample of crashes and not a census of all crashes. Estimates are rounded to the nearest 1,000 large trucks. . Of the top 10 associated factors coded for large trucks, 3 do not appear in Table 2. For those three associated factors—traffic flow interruption, prescription drug use, and required to stop before crash—there was no significant difference in the frequency at which trucks with and without the factors were coded with the critical reason for a crash. It is important to note both the number of times an associated factor is coded and its relative risk ratio. For example, the brake problems associated factor is the most frequently coded (29 percent), but it has a lower relative risk ratio than those for 13 other factors. Pre-crash cargo shift, with the highest relative risk ratio (56.3), was reported for only 4 percent of the large trucks involved in LTCCS crashes. Of the 19 factors listed in Table 2, 15 are driver factors. Those 15 driver factors can be divided into two major groups. One group—fatigue, illness, and drug use (both legal and illegal)—reflects the condition of the driver before the crash. The other group—excessive speed, inadequate surveillance, illegal maneuver, inattention, distraction (outside the truck and inside the truck), and following too close—reflects driving mistakes.
Large Truck – Passenger Vehicle Crashes One-half of the LTCCS crashes involved collisions between a large truck and a passenger vehicle (car, pickup truck, van, or sport utility vehicle). In those crashes, the same associated factors coded most often for the large trucks usually were also coded most often for the passenger vehicles. For both large trucks and passenger vehicles, there was a statistically significant link between the following 10 associated factors (listed in descending order according to how often they were coded for the large truck) and coding of the critical reason:
- Interruption of the traffic flow
- Unfamiliarity with roadway
- Inadequate surveillance
- Driving too fast for conditions
- Illegal maneuver
- Inattention
- Fatigue
- Illness
- False assumption of other road user’s actions
- Distraction by object or person inside the vehicle.
There are some important differences in the coding of associated factors between the two vehicle types. For large trucks, but not passenger vehicles, following too closely (a traffic situation that required a stop before the crash) and distraction outside the vehicle were statistically related to assignment of the critical reason. In addition, vehicle factors that were not coded or examined for the passenger vehicles (brakes, tires, jackknife, and cargo shift) were statistically linked to assignment of the critical reason for large trucks. For passenger vehicles, but not for trucks, alcohol and illegal drug use have a statistically significant association with coding of the critical reason. These factors, combined with fatigue (coded twice as often for passenger vehicles as for large trucks) and illness (coded five times more often for passenger vehicles), show that passenger vehicle drivers were subject to adverse physical conditions more often than truck drivers were before the crashes occurred.
Study and Data on FMCSA’s Web Site More information on the Large Truck Crash Causation Study can be accessed from the LTCCS home page on FMCSA’s Web site, atwww.fmcsa.dot.gov/about/news/news-releases/2006/ltccs-digest.htm. The LTCCS home page includes links to a downloadable version of the public database; users manual; codebook; 20 sample data tables; Report to Congress; LTCCS Analysis Series reports on the study methodology and on the use of the study data for statistical analyses of crash risk; and an overview presentation (PowerPoint) of the study results. For answers to specific questions, call the FMCSA Analysis Division at (202) 366-4039.