Report Finds States Lacking in Accident Prevention

The National Safety Council's report didn't give a single state an "A" grade on accidental injury and death prevention.

Fleet Owner Staff, Staff

June 29, 2017

2 Min Read
Report Finds States Lacking in Accident Prevention

No state does enough to protect residents from preventable deaths and injuries on the road, in their homes and communities or at work, a new report from the National Safety Council (NSC) found.

Preventable deaths across the nation are at all-time high, the group noted, but none of the 50 states or Washington, D.C. got an "A" grade for overall safety, as rated by the organization. NSC's report, The State of Safety, details issues state-by-state in an assessment of how well Americans are protected from risk.

Washington, D.C. and seven states — California, Connecticut, Illinois, Maine, Oregon and Washington –received a "B" overall in the report. Eleven states failed and got an "F", including Arizona, Arkansas, Idaho, Kansas, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota and Wyoming. 

The report comes as National Safety Month, which is observed each June to draw attention to eliminating preventable deaths, comes to a close. Fatalities from poisonings (including drug overdoses), motor vehicle crashes, falls, drowning, choking and fires have increased by 7% since 2014, NSC cited statistically, and are claiming more than 146,000 lives every year.

The NSC report assessed states' safety efforts including laws, policies and regulations relating to issues behind the greatest number of preventable deaths and injuries. In addition to receiving an overall grade, states earned grades in road, home/ community, and workplace safety.

The five highest- and lowest-scoring states for road safety, as ranked in the report, are:

Highest

Lowest

Illinois

Wyoming

Louisiana

Arizona

Washington, D.C.

Missouri

Delaware

South Dakota

Maine

Montana


The five highest- and lowest-scoring states for home and community safety are:

Highest

Lowest

Maryland

Utah

Connecticut

Missouri

California

Idaho

New Mexico

South Carolina

Massachusetts

Mississippi


The five highest- and lowest-scoring states for workplace safety are:

Highest

Lowest

Illinois

Missouri

Washington

South Dakota

Colorado

Idaho

Minnesota

Wyoming

Washington, D.C.

Kansas


"The cultural 'novocaine' has to wear off," said Deborah A.P. Hersman, president and CEO of the National Safety Council. "We lose more than 140,000 people because of events we know how to prevent. This report provides states with a blueprint for saving lives, and we hope lawmakers, civic leaders, public health professionals and safety advocates use it to make their communities measurably safer."

This story originally appeared at Fleet Owner

About the Author

Fleet Owner Staff

Staff, Fleet Owner

Written for executives and managers of commercial-trucking fleets that operate five or more vehicles, Fleet Owner provides information about operations, vehicle maintenance, industry regulations and information-management technology.

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