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New Female Crash Dummy Aims to Make Cars Safer for Women
The THOR-05F dummy includes 150 sensors to address injury risks women face, who are 73% more likely to be seriously hurt in crashes, officials said.
- On Nov. 25, 2025, the U.S. Transportation Department approved the THOR-05F, a female crash test dummy designed for testing in the driver’s seat to better protect drivers.
- Decades of testing centered on 1970s-era male-based testing norms, with female dummies usually in passenger seats despite government crash data showing female drivers face higher injury and death risks.
- Technically, the THOR-05F includes more than 150 sensors, costs about $1 million per dummy, and could cost the industry $50 million–$60 million, CBO estimated.
- Industry groups responded that they have no plans to change consumer-ratings dummies, despite lawmakers pushing for wider adoption, with Sen. Deb Fischer saying `It’s far past time to make these testing standards permanent.`
- Future car designs may better protect women if testing uses more female-specific crash dummy testing, while experts note virtual crash testing grows but physical crash dummies remain central.
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New Female Crash Dummy Aims to Make Cars Safer for Women
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Read Full ArticleNew Female Crash Dummy Aims to Make Cars Safer for Women
Key Takeaways Women are more likely to be hurt or killed in crashes than menA new female crash dummy could help fix safety gapsLawmakers want it used in government testing TUESDAY, Nov. 25, 2025 (HealthDay News) — For decades, car safety tests were built around the body of an average man from the 1970s. Now,
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Total News Sources29
Leaning Left2Leaning Right2Center7Last UpdatedBias Distribution64% Center
Bias Distribution
- 64% of the sources are Center
64% Center
L 18%
C 64%
R 18%
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