81 Unfallstatistik
Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Conference Proceeding (86)
- Book (13)
- Article (3)
- Report (1)
- Working Paper (1)
Keywords
- Conference (82)
- Konferenz (82)
- Accident (71)
- Unfall (70)
- Statistics (44)
- Statistik (44)
- Germany (42)
- Deutschland (41)
- Injury (36)
- Fatality (35)
Institute
- Sonstige (104) (remove)
Police records about traffic accidents like used by IRTAD (International Road Traffic and Accident Database) and CARE (Community Road Accident Database) do not represent all road injuries. For instance, road accidents of bicyclists without a counterpart are usually not reported. Furthermore, IRTAD-like data contains hardly any information on injury outcome and accident circumstances. This information gap leads to an under-representation of the safety concerns of the most vulnerable road users like children and the elderly both in accident research and safety promotion. Injury registration for the European Injury Database (IDB), in turn, combines details of accident causation with diagnostic information that can be used to assess injury severity and long term consequences. The IDB is collecting data from hospital emergency department patients and is being implemented in a growing number of countries. In this article IDB results on mode of transport and injury outcome are presented from a sample of nine EU member states.
Immer wieder werden Straßenbaumaßnahmen geplant und realisiert, bei denen die Möglichkeiten der geltenden Technischen Regelwerke für eine verkehrssichere Gestaltung nicht ausgeschöpft werden. Zielsetzung des Forschungsvorhabens war es, Schulungsunterlagen zu entwickeln, die sowohl zur Qualifizierung von Sicherheitsauditoren als auch zur Weiterbildung von Planern geeignet sind. Die zu erstellenden Materialien sollen Planern und Auditoren das Erkennen von Defiziten sowie das Vermeiden von Planungsfehlern erleichtern. Neben verfügbaren Auditauswertungen Dritter und 315 von den Forschungsnehmern selbst erstellten Auditberichten wurden bestehende Schulungsunterlagen für Planer bzw. Sicherheitsauditoren auf ihren Umfang, ihre Inhalte und Konzepte hin ausgewertet. Die Festlegung der Schulungsmodule orientierte sich sowohl an den bereits in der Praxis angewendeten Curricula für die Auditorenausbildung als auch an der durchgeführten Auswertung vorhandener Auditberichte sowie der Analyse vorliegender Schulungsunterlagen. Die Schulungsmodule und deren Inhalte wurden im Arbeitsausschuss Sicherheitsaudit von Straßen vorgestellt und diskutiert. Sie sind bereits im Anhang 1 des im Druck befindlichen Merkblatts für die Ausbildung und Zertifizierung der Sicherheitsauditoren von Straßen (MAZS 2008) aufgenommen. Für die festgestellten Defizite der relevanten Entwurfselemente wurden auf Grundlage der Entwurfsregelwerke jeweils die sicherheitsrelevanten Aussagen und Entwurfslösungen herausgearbeitet und zugeordnet. Im Ergebnis wurde eine Material- und Beispielsammlung erstellt, die in den Schulungsunterlagen zu jedem Grundlagen- und Thematischen Modul auch entsprechende Beispielsequenzen zu jedem Modul beinhaltet. Diese sehr umfangreichen Schulungsunterlagen (Kap. 3) sind dem Bericht als DVD beigefuegt.
The Centre for Automotive Safety Research (formerly the Road Accident Research Unit) at the University of Adelaide in South Australia has a history of in-depth crash investigation going back to the 1970s. In recent years, our focus has been on studying factors that contribute to road crashes, with an emphasis on the role of road infrastructure. Our method involves crash notification by the South Australian Ambulance Service and detailed investigation of the crash scene usually before the crash-involved vehicles have been moved. This at-scene data collection is supplemented with police crash reports, Coroner- reports including autopsy findings for fatal crashes, case notes from hospitals for all injured persons, structured interviews with crash participants and witnesses, and computerised reconstruction of the events of the crash. One of the most notable research findings to emerge from our in-depth work has been the relationship between travelling speed and the risk of crash involvement. By comparing the calculated free speeds of crash-involved vehicles (cases) with the measured speeds of non-crash-involved vehicles travelling on the same roads at the same time of day (controls), we were able to establish that an exponential relationship exists between travelling speed and the likelihood of involvement in a casualty crash. This was the case for both metropolitan and rural areas. This research prompted the reduction of some speed limits in Australia, which has resulted in notable decreases in crash numbers. Another finding of interest in our recent investigation of 298 mostly daytime crashes in metropolitan Adelaide was that medical conditions make a sizeable contribution to the occurrence of road crashes. We found that almost half of the drivers, riders and pedestrians involved in the collisions had at least one pre-existing medical condition, and half of these individuals had two or more such conditions. We found that a medical condition was the direct causal factor in 13% of the casualty crashes investigated and accounted for 23% of all hospital admission or fatal crash outcomes. A follow-up study of all hospital admissions for road crashes in Adelaide is now going ahead to look further at this problem. The paper also describes studies looking specifically at pedestrian crashes. These include studies of the relationship between travelling speed and the risk of a fatal pedestrian crash, and studies utilising real crash data to validate headforms and test dummies used in the assessment of the safety of new vehicles in the event of a collision with a pedestrian.
While it is important to track trends in the number of road accidents in different countries using national statistics, there is a need for data with more detailed information, so called in-depth accident data. For this reason, several accident data projects emerged worldwide in recent years. However, also different data standards were established and so comparative analysis of international in-depth data has been very hard to conduct, so far. This is why the project iGLAD (Initiative for the Global Harmonization of Accident Data) was established and created the prerequisites for building up a standardized dataset out of the common denominator of different in-depth accident databases from Europe, USA and Asia. In the first phase, the project received funding from ACEA to compile an initial database. To accomplish this, a suitable data scheme has been defined, a pilot study has been conducted as proof of concept and the recoding of the first common data base has been initiated. Also, to prepare the project for its self-supporting continuation in the next years, a business model has been developed. This paper reports the history and status of the project, the current challenges and the creation of a capable consortium to maintain the data. In mid-2014, the initial database containing 1550 cases from 10 different countries will be completed and a first detailed view on this data will be possible.