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Vehicles
Colliding with Animals on the Rise
Human
deaths due to vehicles colliding with animals on U.S. roads
are on the rise, according to the Insurance Institute for
Highway Safety (IIHS). The IIHS says in 2003, such fatalities
rose 27%, to 201. This is almost double the average number
of deaths seen in the mid-1990s. And most of these deaths
were preventable, the IIHS notes, resulting from drivers not
wearing seatbelts or motorcyclists not wearing helmets (note
that one-third of animal collisions involved motorcycles,
even though passenger vehicles outnumber them 40 to 1 on the
road). About 75% of such crashes involve deer and most occurred
in late fall.
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