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by jrkatz
2999 days ago
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Deaths per mile is a good metric in that it is the same for everybody, so to speak, but this is also a weakness. Some people fly far further than they drive or _would_ drive, so for them we should look at per-journey metrics. This must be calculated individually because we all have different typical journeys, but it produces a more meaningful number. For example, any given day that I drive, I drive around 10 miles. When I fly, I usually fly 2600 miles. Over billion days on which I drive, I die 57.5 times, and over a billion flying days I die 156 times - so for me, I am ~3 times as likely to die in transit on a day I fly as on a day I drive. _That's_ what I think about when I file onto the plane. I'm not comparing my odds of death to the hypothetical equivalent drive, in part because I wouldn't drive that 2600 miles so it's an apples to oranges comparison. I'm comparing my odds of death today to my odds of death yesterday and my odds of death tomorrow! |
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[1]: https://www.statisticbrain.com/airplane-crash-statistics/
The same page gives the odds of dying in a single airplane flight as 1 in 29.4 million. The odds of dying per mile driven are approximately 1 in 174 million. On that basis, your 10 mile journey has a risk of death of approximately 1 in 17.4 million - death is 1.7x more likely.
There's probably a bunch of other ways to interpret the statistics - car miles aren't created equally either, there's a difference between long haul and short haul flight fatality statistics, there's a big difference based on where the airline operates. It's (like all things in life) not very clear cut.