HC Deb 18 March 2002 vol 382 c161W
Ms Oona King

To ask the Secretary of State for Health how many child car passengers from social class(a) five and (b) one have been killed in car accidents in each of the last five years; and in how many of these accidents speed was a contributory factor. [39968]

Yvette Cooper

The social class of child car passengers killed in car accidents is not routinely recorded, nor is the specific causation.

The 1997 ONS publication "Health Inequalities: Decennial Supplement" states that: Childhood injury death rates by social class have been compared for years around the 1981 and 1991 Censuses. Death rates from injury and poisoning fell between the two periods for children in each social class, although the differential between the social classes had increased. The decline in rates for children in Social Classes IV and V (21 per cent. and 2 per cent. respectively), was smaller than those for children in Social Classes I and II (32 per cent. and 37 per cent.). Motor vehicle accidents accounted for half of all childhood injury deaths and showed a similar social class gradient to that for all accidental deaths in childhood".

The number of child car occupant fatalities is as follows:

Deaths
1996 79
1997 74
1998 64
1999 71
2000 49