Women face more injury risks in car crashes, yet dummies are modelled after men


By AGENCY
A THOR-5F female crash test dummy is shown in a driver’s seat with a mock air bag at Humanetics in Farmington Hills, Michigan. Photo: PAUL SANCYA/AP

Maria Weston Kuhn had one lingering question about the car crash that forced her to have emergency surgery during a vacation in Ireland: Why did she and her mother sustain serious injuries while her father and brother, who sat in the front, emerge unscathed?

“It was a head-on crash and they were closest to the point of contact,” said Kuhn, now 25, who missed a semester of college to recover from the 2019 collision that caused her seat belt to slide off her hips and rupture her intestines by pinning them against her spine. “That was an early clue that something else was going on.”

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