| Consumer
Federation of America * American Academy of Pediatrics * Natural
Trails and Waters Coalition
October 7, 2005
ATV Injuries and Deaths Spiral Upward
CPSC Votes to Move Forward on ATV Rulemaking
Washington, DC – For the third year in a
row, serious injuries caused by all-terrain vehicles (ATVs) topped
record levels for all riders, and children under age 16 continued
to suffer increasingly more injuries. As the toll on children continues
to mount, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) announced
that it voted to issue an Advanced Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
(ANPR) regarding the risks of injury and death posed by ATVs, and
voted to defer a 2002 petition from Consumer Federation of America
(CFA), American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and seven other organizations.
The petition requested that CPSC ban the sale of adult-size ATVs
for use by children.
“The profound increase in injuries and deaths caused by ATVs
show how pervasive this national epidemic has become. This tragic
problem is in need of an aggressive and immediate solution by CPSC
and state governments,” stated Rachel Weintraub, Director
of Product Safety for Consumer Federation of America. “We
are cautiously optimistic that the ANPR issued today, which includes
the substance of our petition as a possible solution, will begin
a serious effort to curb the rising tide of injuries and deaths.”
“Pediatric emergency department physicians have learned to
expect devastating injuries when a child crashes an ATV,”
stated Gary Smith, MD, DrPH, FAAP, Chair of the AAP Committee on
Injury, Violence and Poison Prevention. “In 2004, ATVs killed
at least 130 children and injured over 44,000. This is the equivalent
of two school buses full of children dying and the entire population
of Palm Springs, California being severely injured. For almost 20
years, physicians and consumer advocates have been pressing the
CPSC to pass meaningful regulations to reduce the carnage. It's
time for real action.”
The CPSC released its 2004 Annual Report on ATV-related Deaths
and Injuries yesterday. Major findings include:
- Serious injuries requiring emergency room treatment increased
almost eight percent from 125,500 in 2003 to 136,100 in 2004.
- The estimated number of ATV-related fatalities increased from
617 in 2002 to 740 in 2003 - another gruesome record. ]
- In 2004, ATVs killed at least 130 children younger than 16 accounting
for 28 percent of fatalities.
- Children under 16 suffered 44,700 serious injuries in 2004 –
or 33 percent of all injuries. This is an almost 16 percent increase
from 2003 when children suffered 38,600 serious injuries. This
increase in 2004 is statistically significant.
- Between 1985 and 2004, children under 16 accounted for 31 percent
of all injuries.
The CPSC data includes a risk estimate of ATV injuries per 10,000
four-wheel ATVs. The risk estimate for 2004 is 187.9 for 2004
as compared to 188.4 in 2003. According to CPSC, this slight reduction
is not statistically significant.
“The Commission needs to act quickly to protect children
from ATV injury and death,” stated Jason Kiely, interim executive
director of the Natural Trails and Waters Coalition. “The
best solution is to prohibit the sale of overpowering, adult-sized
ATVs for use by children. The record number of deaths and hospitalizations
prove that self-policing by ATV manufacturers and salesman isn’t
working.”
More than three years after doctors, nurses, consumer advocates
and others demanded action, through filing a petition with CPSC,
the agency has commenced a rulemaking process to formally study
the problem and potential solutions. In June, CPSC Chairman Hal
Stratton directed Commission staff to explore several issues. This
“broad review” has now been issued as an Advanced Notice
of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPR) and could ultimately lead CPSC to
take regulatory or non-regulatory action to protect consumers from
ATV deaths and injuries. An ANPR is the first stage of multi stage
rulemaking process. There is no timeline for the full process, though
the public has 60 days to respond to this ANPR.
While the ANPR sets out many issues to evaluate, one in particular
is of concern to consumer and practitioner advocate – the
development of a “transitional ATV” for children 14
and older. These ATVs would likely have engines larger than those
currently recommended for children under 16. The CPSC, industry
and many consumer advocates recommend that children ages 12 through
15 not ride ATVs with engines larger than 90 cc’s. The American
Academy of Pediatrics recommends that no child under age 16 ride
an ATV of any size.
-end-
Consumer Federation of America is a non-profit association of 300
consumer groups, with a combined membership of more than 50 million
people. CFA was founded in 1968 to advance the consumers' interest
through advocacy and education. www.consumerfed.org
American Academy of Pediatrics is an organization of 60,000 primary
care pediatricians, pediatric medical subspecialists and pediatric
surgical specialists dedicated to the health, safety and well being
of infants, children, adolescents and young adults. www.aap.org
The Natural Trails and Waters Coalition includes more than 100
conservation, recreation and other groups working to protect and
restore all public lands and waters from the damage caused by snowmobiles,
all-terrain vehicles, dirt bikes, jet skis and all other off-road
vehicles. www.naturaltrails.org
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