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Effect of Class I-III obesity on driver seat belt fit.

Monica L H JonesSheila M EbertOliver VarbanJingwen HuMatthew P ReedPara WeerappuliSrinivasan SundarajanSaeed Barbat
Published in: Traffic injury prevention (2021)
The results suggest that increasing levels of obesity class effectively introduces slack in the seat belt system by routing the belt further away from the skeleton. Because the belt is designed to engage the pelvis during a frontal crash, belt placements that are higher and further forward may increase injury risk by allowing excursions or submarining. Unique to this cohort, sex had an important effect on belt fit measures after taking into account stature and BMI. The participant and belt factors considered explained only about 40% of the variance in belt fit. The remaining variance may be due to preference or exogenous body shape effects. Further research is needed to assess methods for enhanced seat belt fit for people with obesity, including addressing sex differences in belt routing.
Keyphrases
  • metabolic syndrome
  • insulin resistance
  • type diabetes
  • weight loss
  • weight gain
  • adipose tissue
  • functional connectivity