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Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Toyota is Dedicated to Making Drivers, Passengers Safer


This is part of our six part Toyota in Action series. See our previous articles on operations, community, and the people of Toyota.

Safety is generally one of the biggest concerns of car buyers when they are considering buying a new automobile. Studies have shown that fewer people are dying in car collisions and the biggest reason is because cars are built smarter and safer. Toyota is dedicated not just to building safer cars, but also educating teens and parents about safer driving and investing in the future of safety technology.

Of course, when people think of automobile safety, they think of safe cars. Here are some of the highlights from Toyota’s automobiles:
  • 100% of new Toyotas are equipped with the new Star Safety System and Smartshop Brake Override Technology, the first full-line manufacturer to do so.
  • There are six advanced safety features in the Star Safety System: Vehicle Stability Control, Traction Control, Anti-Lock Brake System, Electronic Brake-Force Distribution, Brake Assist, and Smart Stop Technology.
  • Toyota invests $1 million per hour into research and development to create safer cars

While many automakers, including Toyota, tout great safety measures that prevent injury when a collision occurs, Toyota also invests in programs that prevent collisions and serious injuries, including teen driving programs like the Toyota Driving Expectations (TDE) and Toyota Teen Driver (TTD). Toyota knows that getting a driver’s license is an exciting rite of passage for teens, but the first year of driving is also the most dangerous. Parents want their children to be safe, so in addition to these teen driving programs, Toyota has listed a few tips to help parents with teen-driver safety:
  • Be the driver you want your child to be. Parents are the first and best driving instructors, role models who lead by example.
  • Insist that your teen always wear a seat belt. Peer pressure or image consciousness must never take a backseat to safety.
  •  Educate your teen to avoid distractions and limit all secondary activity – which includes not just texting and cell phone use but eating while driving, bringing pets into the vehicle, and other outside elements that might interfere with keeping one’s eyes on the road.
  •  Restrict teen passengers, whether friends or relatives. For every additional teen passenger in the car, chances increase for the creation of distractions that could lead to accidents.

5.       Set expectations with your teen for safe driving by developing together a “driving contract” that outlines expected behaviors, consequences, and rewards. For an example of what such an agreement might look like, visit http://toyotateendriver.discoveryeducation.com/parents.cfm#mta.

In addition to teen safety programs, Toyota has also teamed up with Cincinnati Children’s Hospital and Medical Center to create a child restraint education program called Buckle Up For Life. The founding director of Trauma Services at the hospital noticed a disturbing trend: that African-American and Hispanic children were three to four times more likely to suffer serious injury or death in an automobile collision. One of these children was Reyna Hernandez who had to re-learn to walk after being thrown from a car because she was not wearing a seat belt. Reyna overcame her injuries and is now a doctor supporting Buckle Up For Life. Watch this video on Reyna’s experience and Buckle Up For Life:

Three out of four car seats are installed incorrectly; Toyota thinks that is too many. Toyota cares about the future of all children and believes that all children should ride safely. Buckle Up For Life is focused on educating parents and guardians in African-American and Hispanic communities about the importance of properly using and installing car seats and other child safety technology.

To Toyota, safety isn’t just about making its own cars safer; the goal of Toyota is to improve automotive safety as a whole. As a result, Toyota invested $50 million to launch the Collaborative Safety Research Center that is “devoted to spurring the advancement of automotive safety in North America based on the three pillars of collaborative research, accident data analysis, and outreach…” Safety information discovered at the CSRC is available to the entire auto industry.

“By partnering with leading North American universities, hospitals, research institutions, federal agencies, and other organizations, CSRC is working to reduce traffic fatalities and injuries on America’s roads by better understanding the complex dynamics between vehicle, driver, and traffic environment. The Center's current focus is on protecting children, teens and seniors — the three most vulnerable groups on the road. Together with our ever-growing team of partners, including our Charter Partners at The University of Michigan, Virginia Tech, and The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, we're examining ways to reduce driver distraction, studying the effectiveness of an electronic coaching and monitoring system for teen drivers, and creating a national crash surveillance system focused on child occupants of vehicles-- with more programs and partners to come.”

So whether it is behind the scenes in research and education or utilizing Toyotas six-point Star Safety System into all new automobiles, you know that Toyota is dedicated to keeping their drivers and passengers, and all drivers and passengers, safer.

For more information about Toyota’s dedication to safety, go to www.ToyotainAction.com or www.toyota.com/safety

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