Motorcyclist Traffic Fatalities by State: 2015 Preliminary Data
This report provides a first look at 2015 motorcyclist fatalities nationally and by state.
GHSA's Spotlights on Highway Safety serve as snapshots of ongoing and emerging traffic safety issues in the states.
This report provides a first look at 2015 motorcyclist fatalities nationally and by state.
GHSA estimates a 10% in the number of pedestrians killed in motor vehicle crashes in 2015 compared to 2014.
This report takes a close look at the issue by examining rear seat belt use rates, state laws and enforcement, and public education efforts, and makes recommendations for states to help boost rear seat belt use through programs and policies.
This report provides a first look at 2014 motorcyclist fatalities nationally and by state, based on preliminary data supplied by all 50 states and the District of Columbia.
An estimated 2,125 pedestrians were killed in the first half of 2014, essentially unchanged when compared with the 2,141 pedestrian fatalities during the same period in 2013.
This GHSA Spotlight on Highway Safety report looks at the issue of bicyclist safety, analyzing how fatality trends and crash patterns have changed since the mid-1970s. Two areas of focus are helmet use and alcohol use by fatally injured cyclists.
GHSA projects that the number of motorcyclist traffic fatalities in the United States in 2013 decreased approximately 7 percent.
State Highway Safety Office data showed that the number of pedestrian traffic fatalities in the United States for the first six months of 2013 decreased by 190 – or 8.7%.