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Nachtunfälle : eine Analyse auf der Grundlage der Daten der amtlichen Straßenverkehrsunfallstatistik
(1978)
Im Anschluss an eine Charakterisierung der Nachtunfälle anhand von Einzelstudien werden Untersuchungen referiert, die die Auswirkungen bestimmter Umstände betreffen (Alkohol, Witterungseinflüsse, Unterschiede im Verkehrsaufkommen, Einfluss straßenbaulicher Merkmale, spezielle Orientierungsprobleme, Leistungsfähigkeit des Rettungsdienstes, Gurtanlegeverhalten). Anschließend wird über Untersuchungen berichtet, die die Wirksamkeit von Maßnahmen zur Reduzierung der Nachtunfälle betreffen (Wirksamkeit von Alkoholkampagnen, Überwachungsmaßnahmen und gesetzlichen Regelungen; Beleuchtung bzw. Sichtbarkeit des Verkehrsraumes; Wirksamkeitsuntersuchungen beleuchteter Fußgängerüberwege; Beleuchtung und Sichtbarkeit der Verkehrsteilnehmer; Verbesserung der optischen Führung durch Fahrbahnmarkierungen; Blendschutzeinrichtungen; Wildschutzzäune; Einführung der Sommerzeit; Verbesserung der Unfallrettung). Abschließend werden Fragestellungen vorgelegt, zu denen bisher keine befriedigenden Aussagen vorliegen. - Im zweiten Teil wird zunächst die Bedeutung der Nachtunfälle innerhalb des gesamten Unfallgeschehens in der zeitlichen Entwicklung dargestellt. Anschließend werden die kennzeichnenden Parameter des Unfallgeschehens für Unfälle mit Personenschaden erörtert (Art der Verkehrsteilnahme, Lebensalter sowie Geschlecht der Fußgänger bzw. Fahrer, Ortslage, Uhrzeit, Straßenzustand, Unfalltypen und -ursachen). Danach folgt eine mehrdimensionale Betrachtung zu ausgewählten Problembereichen (Unfallursache Alkohol, ungünstige Witterungsverhältnisse, jugendliche Fahrer von motorisierten Zweirädern, Pkw-Fahrer, Fußgänger). Schließlich wird über künftige Auswertungen berichtet.
Im Teil 1 erfolgt eine Strukturanalyse zum Unfallgeschehen in den "Neuen Ländern" (fünf neue Bundesländer und Berlin (Ost)) für den Zeitraum von 1989 bis 1991 im Vergleich mit dem Unfallgeschehen in den alten Bundesländern im Jahre 1991. Untersuchungsgegenstand sind Unfälle mit Personenschaden und insbesondere die im Straßenverkehr Getöteten. Datenbasis sind im wesentlichen die Einzeldaten der amtlichen Straßenverkehrsunfallstatistik. Die im Jahre 1991 in den Neuen Ländern besonders ungünstige Unfallsituation ist im Zusammenhang mit der Umbruchsituation seit der Grenzöffnung im November 1989 zu sehen. So hat sich zum Beispiel die stark angestiegene Pkw-Verfügbarkeit in den Neuen Ländern in einer hohen Unfallbeteiligung von Fahranfängern niedergeschlagen. Dabei zeigt die vergleichende Analyse von jungen Fahrern (18 bis 24 Jahre) mit älteren Fahrern, das in den Neuen Ländern Fahrfehler auch in erheblichem Umfang bei den älteren Fahrern auftreten. Neben den Effekten, die im Zusammenwirken von Lebensalter, Geschlecht und Fahrerfahrung auf das Unfallgeschehen ausgehen, werden auch strukturelle Unterschiede in den Problembereichen "Alkohol und Fahren" sowie "Landstraßenunfälle" für die Neuen und Alten Länder herausgearbeitet. In Teil 2 wird ein kurzer vergleichender Überblick über Niveau und Entwicklung der Verkehrssicherheit gegeben. Dabei steht das Unfallgeschehen in den Neuen Bundesländern zwei Jahre nach der "Wende" im Vergleich zur "alten" Bundesrepublik sowie die Einordnung in den Kontext der Verkehrssicherheit in 8 europäischen Vergleichsländern und den USA im Vordergrund. Informiert wird über einige Rahmenbedingungen sowie über Getötetenanzahlen, Struktur- und Risikovergleiche. Von ungünstiger Ausgangslage hat sich das Risiko, im Verkehr tödlich zu verunglücken, im westlichen Deutschland - D(W) - in den zurückliegenden Jahren günstig entwickelt; D(W) liegt auf mittlerer Position mit weiterhin günstiger Tendenz. Im östlichen Deutschland - D(O) - wird ein Strukturbruch deutlich: bis 1989 lag dort das globale bevölkerungsbezogene Risiko in der Größenordnung der günstigsten hochmotorisierten europäischen Vergleichsländer Großbritannien, Niederlande und Schweden; 1990 haben sich in D(O) die Risikowerte etwa verdoppelt, dabei sind einzelne Unfallbereiche besonders betroffen; 1991 ist eine weitere deutliche Verschlechterung zu verzeichnen, bei der D(O) beim Sicherheitsvergleich die Spanne der europäischen Vergleichsländer überschreitet. Für 1992 ist ein Rückgang der Getötetenzahlen absehbar, allerdings liegen die Werte noch deutlich über denen des Jahres 1990.
Supervision of the safety performance in public transport is one of the main tasks of the Federal Office of Transport (FOT) in Switzerland. Recently a three level system of safety indicators has been defined to cover all means of Swiss public transport. The safety indicators are fed by the FOT incident database since the year 2000. In cooperation with the Institute for Traffic Safety and Automation Engineering (iVA) at TU Braunschweig, Germany, FOT is developing a suitable methodology for the definition and evaluation of the safety targets in Swiss public transport. The methodology is applied for evaluation of safety indicators on a country level and for single transport companies. In a new approach the abovementioned methodology is applied to car incident data to develop an indicator based cross-modal safety measure.
Pedestrian and cyclist are the most vulnerable road users in traffic crashes. One important aspect of this study was the comparable analysis of the exact impact configuration and the resulting injury patterns of pedestrians and cyclists in view of epidemiology. The secondary aim was assessment of head injury risks and kinematics of adult pedestrian and cyclists in primary and secondary impacts and to correlate the injuries related to physical parameters like HIC value, 3ms linear acceleration, and discuss the technical parameter with injuries observed in real-world accidents based documented real accidents of GIDAS and explains the head injuries by simulated load and impact conditions based on PC-Crash and MADYMO. A subsample of n=402 pedestrians and n=940 bicyclists from GIDAS database, Germany was used for preselection, from which 22 pedestrian and 18 cyclist accidents were selected for reconstruction by initially using PC-Crash to calculate impact conditions, such as vehicle impact velocity, vehicle kinematic sequence and throw out distance. The impact conditions then were employed to identify the initial conditions in simulation of MADYMO reconstruction. The results show that cyclists always suffer lower injury outcomes for the same accident severity. Differences in HIC, head relative impact velocity, 3ms linear contiguous acceleration, maximum angular velocity and acceleration, contact force, throwing distance and head contact timing are shown. The differences of landing conditions in secondary impacts of pedestrians and cyclists are also identified. Injury risk curves were generated by logistic regression model for each predicting physical parameters.
Traffic accidents were ranked the third among the major causes of death in Thailand. About 13,438 deaths and the death rate from traffic accident was 21.5 per 100,000 of population in 2002. The deaths and death rate varied upon the economic situation. After the economic crisis, traffic accidents were increased as well as the period of the bubble economy. In the Central region of Thailand numbers of road traffic crashes were lower than Bangkok Metropolis, but the highest in the number of deaths, death rate and serious injuries in 2002. Men aged 15"29 years old had higher numbers of deaths than men in other age groups and higher than women. Deaths and injuries from road traffic crashes were the highest in April and January, because there was a long weekend in those months. About 80 percent of road traffic crashes were caused by private car and motorcycle. In 2000 about 51 percent of traffic accidents took place on the straight way, followed by the junction and curves. In 2002, about 97 percent of road traffic crashes were caused by human factors including improper passing, speeding and disregarding to traffic signal, however, the identification of causes of traffic accident needed to improve. Drunk driving, disregarding on safety equipment usage, inefficiency of law enforcement and discontinuing of road safety programs were the deepest causes of traffic accidents. Research based information, a broad coalition of stakeholder and urban planning policy were needed to incorporate for a comprehensive road safety policy formulation and actions.
Estimation of the benefits for the UK for potential options to modify UNECE Regulation No. 95
(2010)
The side impact problem in Europe remains substantial. UK data shows that between 22% and 26% of car occupant casualties are involved in a side impact, but this rises to between 29% and 38% for those who are fatally injured. This indicates the more injurious nature of side impacts compared with frontal impacts. The European Enhanced Vehicle safety Committee (EEVC) has performed work to address the side impact issue since 1979. As part of its continuing work, it has recently investigated potential options for regulatory changes to improve side impact protection in cars further. To support this work the UK undertook an analysis to estimate the benefit for potential options to modify UNECE Regulation 95. The analysis used the UK national STATS19 and detailed Co-operative Crash Injury Study (CCIS) accident databases. Of the potential options reviewed, it was found that the addition of a pole test offered the greatest benefit.
Internationally, the need is expressed for harmonized traffic accident data collection (PSN, PENDANT, etc.). Together with this effort of harmonization, traffic accident investigation moves more and more in the direction of accident causation. As current methods only partly address these needs, a new method was set up. The main characteristics of this method are: • Accident/injury causation (associated) factors can objectively be identified and quantified, by comparison with exposure information from a normal population. • All relevant accident and exposure data can be included: human-, vehicle-, and environmental related data for the pre-crash, crash and postcrash situation (the so-called Haddon matrix). The level of detail can be chosen depending on interest and/or budget, which makes the method very flexible. In this paper the accident collection and control group method are presented, including some of the achieved results from a pilot study on 30 truck accidents and 30 control locations. The data were analyzed by using cross-tabulations and classification-tree analysis. The method proved useful for the identification of statistically significant causational aspects.
Portugal has the highest rate of road fatalities in Europe (2002 and for Eur-15 - CARE database). For this highest rate, the accidents involving pedestrians and motorcycle occupants have a higher contribution than the European average. In the last years, especially accidents involving motorcycles have been investigated and currently two different projects are being carried out, one related with motorcycles accidents and the other with pedestrian accidents. In these projects, countermeasures among others to reduce the fatalities between these two types of road users are being studied. These accidents are investigated with the commercial accident reconstruction software PCCRASH but also new methodologies based on multibody dynamics are in development in order to more accurately study these two types of accidents. In this paper, the methodologies in use for accident reconstruction and new methodologies in development are presented. Speeding his found to be one of the major causes of road fatalities for pedestrians and motorcycle occupants. In the case of motorcycle accidents, these involve mainly young drivers. Aspects as social behavior are also important to understand the causes of some of these accidents. Some examples of accidents occurring in Portugal, involving especially motorcycles and pedestrians are presented and discussed.
Accidents involving two wheels vehicles represent one of the more important types of accidents in Europe. These accidents are usually not easy to reconstruct specially for the analysis of the injuries and its correlation with accident dynamics and evidences. Different methodologies are applied in this work for the reconstruction of two wheeler accidents, especially accident involving motorcycles. From the typologies of road evidences like skid marks, to the use of Pc-Crash and the use of Madymo models, different reconstruction of real accidents are presented. One of the questions that sometimes arise for legal purposes when some type of head injuries arise is if the occupant was wearing or not a helmet. The correlation of head injuries with the use of the helmet is a very important issue, therefore an important legal aspect. One of the key questions for the reconstructions that is difficult to analyze, is if the vehicle occupant, was or not, wearing the helmet. Based on the previously collected information, a generic model of a helmet was developed on CAD 3D, followed by its conversion into finite elements, all in order to perform impact tests using the Madymo software that would help improve the helmet- safety, but that also can be used as a tool in accident reconstruction.
The number of road accidents in Portugal has decreased significantly in the last decades, however, this tendency is not similar in all types of transportation. In the most recent years and by European standards, Portugal is still one of the leading countries concerning the number of fatalities in Powered Two Wheelers (PTW) accidents. To this effect, the in-depth investigation of PTW accidents is crucial and so, a thorough statistical analysis concerning the main factors influencing PTW riders injury severity accidents was undertaken regarding the 2007-2010 period in the National Road Safety Authority (ANSR) injured riders database using the software SPSS. In addition, to determine the importance of absent factors in the database analysis, such as velocity, a set of 53 real accidents involving PTW were also investigated and computationally reconstructed using the software PC-Crash. Lateral collisions between a motorcycle, its rider and the side of three different passenger cars were also simulated, varying the motorcycle impact angle and velocity in order to estimate the PTW deformation energy and the rider- injuries, as this accident configuration stands out in terms of frequency and even severity. The results of this detailed study are presented.