In 1966, passage of the Highway Safety Act and the National Traffic and
Motor Vehicle Safety Act authorized the federal government to set and
regulate standards for motor vehicles and highways, a mechanism
necessary for effective prevention.2,3 Many changes in both
vehicle and highway design followed this mandate. Vehicles (agent of
injury) were built with new safety features, including head rests,
energy-absorbing steering wheels, shatter-resistant windshields, and
safety belts.3,4 Roads (environment) were improved by
better delineation of curves (edge and center line stripes and
reflectors), use of breakaway sign and utility poles, improved
illumination, addition of barriers separating oncoming traffic lanes,
and guardrails.4,5 The results were rapid. By 1970,
motor-vehicle-related death rates were decreasing by both the public
health measure (deaths per 100,000 population) and the traffic safety
indicator (deaths per VMT) (Figure
2).1