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Data shows young adult males hardest hit in fatal crashes: OPP

File photo. Lars Hagberg/The Canadian Press/File

ORILLIA, Ont. – Provincial police say data compiled over the last 10 years suggests men aged 25 to 34 are the most common victims in the fatal collisions they investigate.

OPP say they are releasing the figures in order to shed light on the victims and factors involved in more than 3,500 deaths on provincially patrolled roads between 2005 and 2014.

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Young adult males are the hardest hit, police say, with the 10-year data revealing that twice as many males (2,358) have died in collisions as females (1,146).

Men aged 25 to 34 accounted for 397 of the deaths and of those, 310 of them were drivers and 60 were passengers.

Drivers accounted for about 69 per cent of the deaths, while about 23 per cent of those killed were passengers and 7.7 per cent were pedestrians.

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Over the 10-year period, 856 people died in crashes in which lack of seat belt use was a factor in their deaths – 611 of them drivers and 245 passengers.

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