The FAA states
To keep you and your family as safe as possible during flight, FAA regulations require passengers to be seated with their seat belts fastened:
When the airplane leaves the gate and as it climbs after take-off.
During landing and taxi.
Whenever the seat belt sign is illuminated during flight.
Why is it important to follow these safety regulations? Consider this:
In nonfatal accidents, in-flight turbulence is the leading cause of injuries to airline passengers and flight attendants.
Each year, approximately 58 people in the United States are injured by turbulence > while not wearing their seat belts.
From 1980 through 2008, U.S. air carriers had 234 turbulence accidents*, resulting in 298 serious injuries and three fatalities.
Of the 298 serious injuries, 184 involved flight attendants and 114 involved passengers.
At least two of the three fatalities involved passengers who were not wearing their seat belts while the seat belt sign was illuminated.
Generally, two-thirds of turbulence-related accidents occur at or above 30,000 feet.
It is quite possible that the FAA is correct to say that wearing a seatbelt while flying reduces the risk of death and injury.
My question is: If this be true, what precisely (quantitatively, statistically) is the magnitude of this safety benefit? This includes ALL possible sources of risk of injury or death, including turbulence, crashes, and anything else conceivable (e.g. slightly reduced risk of someone drunk pulling you out of your seat and throwing you out of the plane).
A possible statistic might be something like: Number of deaths avoided, per 1 million hours with seatbelt fastened, when seatbelt light is on (as compared to not fastening the seatbelt when the light is on).
How in turn does this compare to other safety measures that most people do not take, but ought to (at least according to some experts)? For example, wearing a mask to reduce the risk of death from flu. If, while in public, I wear a mask for 1 million hours, presumably my risk of death from flu decreases a little. How does this compare to the benefit from my fastening my airplane seatbelt for 1 million hours?
Or, as another example, wearing a helmet while cycling to reduce the risk of death from a cycling accident, which, again, is a recommendation by some.