Risk Factors
for Whiplash
In this study, researchers
interviewed 251 drivers involved in rear-end collisions that occurred less than
one year before the interview. The objective was to determine which accident
and occupant variables determined whiplash symptomatology.
Of the interviewed drivers:
- 35% reported a whiplash
injury arising from the collision.
- Consistent with numerous
other studies, women were more likely to report whiplash symptoms than were
men; 25% of men reported whiplash, while 44% of women did.
- Two thirds of the whiplash
occupants had consulted a health care provider, but only three drivers had
gone to the emergency room after the accident.
- 40% of the whiplash
patients reported a restriction of their daily activities.
- 23% of the whiplash patients
had symptoms for at least three months.
The researchers also found
the following variables were more likely to result in whiplash injury:
- "Female sex and a history
of neck injury were the only statistically significant predictors of 'whiplash'
occurrence. The relative risk of 'whiplash' occurring in drivers reporting
a history of neck injury was more than twice that of drivers with no history.
For women, the risk of 'whiplash' was approximately twice that of men. Age,
occupational status and educational attainment were not significant predictors
of 'whiplash' occurrence."
- "Vehicle masses appeared
to have an influence on the risk of 'whiplash' occurrence. The relative risk
of occurrence in drivers of light vehicles (<1100 kg [2420 lb.]) was 1.43
times that for drivers of heavy vehicles (³1300 kg [2860 lb.]); this relative
risk fell just short of statistical significance…The relative risk estimates
relating to the weight of the striking vehicle showed a pattern of decreasing
risk on injury with decreasing mass of the striking vehicle, and there was
a positive association between the weight of the striking vehicle relative
to the driver's vehicle and the risk of 'whiplash' injury, as indicated by
the trend in the relative risks over the relative vehicle-weight categories."
The relationship between striking vehicle vs. target vehicle mass has been
hypothesized by engineers as a risk factor for injury, but this is the first
study to actually see the relationship in a group of patients.
- "There was a 9 per cent
increase in the risk of 'whiplash' injury in drivers who were not aware of
the impending collision." Although it did not reach statistical significance,
"Compared with drivers reporting two or more sources of forewarning, those
who had only one source had a 17 per cent increase in incidence, while those
who reported no forewarning had a 20 per cent increase." These findings are
also consistent with the hypotheses of whiplash experts who predict that the
absence of forewarning results in increased tissue damage because of low muscle
tone.
- Dolinis J. Risk factors
for 'whiplash' in drivers: a cohort study of rear-end traffic crashes. Injury
1997;28(3):173-179.
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