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1-Year-Old Greenwood Girl Dies After Mother Accidentally Runs Her Over

Last updated on Monday, February 27, 2017

(JOHNSON CO.) - A Greenwood toddler has died after she was accidentally run over by her mother backing out of the driveway Thursday evening.

WISH TV (wishtv.com) reports, Johnson County Sheriff's Office, deputies were called to the 4700 block of Walker Street just before 5:30 p.m.

Deputies said the 1-year-old girl was hit while her mother was behind backing a 1999 Dodge Durango out of the garage.
The woman tested negative for alcohol.

A neighbor performed CPR on the girl, but she was pronounced dead while being taken to the hospital.

Unfortunately, this incident fits the backover 'mold' perfectly:

In the U.S., 50 children are backed over EVERY WEEK because a driver could not see them. Rearview cameras can be installed on any vehicle to end these predictable tragedies.

Blindzones... every vehicle has them. A blindzone is the area behind a vehicle where the driver cannot see even
when looking back and using their rear and side view mirrors correctly. (Blindzones are also in front of cars but are not as large)

Contributing Factors:

You cannot avoid hitting something you literally cannot see.

Statistics:

Rear Visibility Standard:

To reduce the risk of devastating backover crashes involving vulnerable populations (especially very young children),
KidsAndCars.org and their partners, worked to prevent these predictable and preventable tragedies for over one-decade. A rear visibility standard was issued on April 7, 2014 as mandated by the Cameron Gulbransen Kids Transportation Safety Act.

For more information visit www.KidsAndCars.org or contact us at email@KidsAndCars.org.

The Department of Transportation (DOT) issued the final rule to expand the required field of view for all passenger vehicles weighing less than 10,000 pounds.

This new standard specifies the area behind a vehicle which must be visible to the driver when the vehicle is placed into reverse. The agency anticipates that in the near term, vehicle manufacturers will use rearview camera systems and invehicle visual displays to meet the requirements of this rule. All motor vehicles sold or leased in the U.S. must comply with this regulation by May 2018.

KidsAndCars.org anticipates that the rear visibility rule will significantly reduce backover crashes. Education and awareness of backover crashes will continue to be critical for decades because most older-model vehicles do not have rearview cameras. All vehicles can and should be retrofitted to include rearview technology.

Prevention/Safety Tips:

KidsAndCars.org urges everyone to install a rearview camera and sensors on their vehicle. Many drivers [incorrectly] believe they have to wait until they purchase a new vehicle to have a rearview camera system; but an after-market rearview camera and/or sensors can be installed on ANY vehicle.

Drivers should also heighten their awareness before engaging a vehicle into reverse; especially when children are present. Young children are impulsive and unpredictable; still have very poor judgment and little understanding of danger.

These precautions can save lives.

*Source: Not-in-Traffic Surveillance: Fatal and Injury Statistics in Nontraffic Crashes, DOT HS 811 813, April 2014, 2008-2011

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