Definitely. Car injuries have stayed roughly the same per capita.
And it seems like many communities have quietly lost pedestrians (it seems like baby boomers are atypically car-dependent compared to the generations before and after them but they're a huge generation and the biggest one in many places).
And now they're in their 70s are far more likely to be involved in in-town crashes (while highway crashes may be weighted towards young men at high speed, residential crashes tend to be old people pressing Gas rather than Brake, or Reverse rather Forward)
I know that my hometown has a LOT more cars than it did when I was growing up in spite of the fact that the population has actually declined.
And car accidents is probably one of the statistics that hasn't declined.