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Epidemiology of motor vehicle collisions

Worldwide, it was estimated that 1.25 million people were killed and many millions more were injured in motor vehicle collisions in 2013.[2] This makes motor vehicle collisions the leading cause of death among young adults of 15–29 years of age (360,000 die a year) and the ninth most frequent cause of death for all ages worldwide.[3] In the United States, 40,100 people died and 2.8 million were injured in crashes in 2017,[4] and around 2,000 children under 16 years old die every year.[5]

Deaths for road traffic collisions per 100,000 inhabitants in 2012:[1]
  no data
  < 5
  5-10
  10-15
  15-20
  20-25
  25-30
  30-35
  35-40
  > 40
Road fatalities per 1 billion vehicle-km in 2004:
  no data
  < 5.0
  5.0-6.5
  6.5-8.0
  8.0-9.5
  9.5-11.0
  11.0-12.5
  12.5-14.0
  14.0-15.5
  15.5-17.0
  17.0-18.5
  18.5-20.0
  > 20.0

History and trends edit

 
Annual US traffic fatalities per billion vehicle miles traveled (red), miles traveled (blue), per one million people (orange), total annual deaths (light blue), VMT in tens of billions (dark blue) and population in millions (teal), from 1921 to 2017

Road toll figures in developed nations show that car collision fatalities have declined since 1980. Japan is an extreme example, with road deaths decreasing to 5,115 in 2008, which is 25% of the 1970 rate per capita and 17% of the 1970 rate per vehicle distance travelled. In 2008, for the first time, more pedestrians than vehicle occupants were killed in Japan by cars.[6] Besides improving general road conditions like lighting and separated walkways, Japan has been installing intelligent transportation system technology such as stalled-car monitors to avoid crashes.

In developing nations, statistics may be grossly inaccurate or hard to get. Some nations have not significantly reduced the total death rate, which stands at 12,000 in Thailand in 2007, for example.[7]

In the United States, twenty-eight states had reductions in the number of automobile crash fatalities between 2005 and 2006.[8] 55% of vehicle occupants 16 years or older in 2006 were not using seat belts when they crashed.[9]

Road fatality trends tend to follow Smeed's law,[10] an empirical schema that correlates increased fatality rates per capita with traffic congestion.

Deaths in 2005 edit

 
According to Eurostat the automobile is one of the least safe means of transport, if safety is measured as the fewest fatalities per travelled distance. Based on data by EU-27 member nations, 2008–2010.[11][12]

Crashes are categorized by what is struck and the direction of impact, or impacts. These are some common crash types, based on the total number that occurred in the US in 2005, the percentage of total crashes, and the percentage of fatal crashes:[13]

  • Rear impacts (1,824,000 crashes, 29.6% of all US crashes, 5.4% of US fatal crashes)
  • Angle or side impacts (1,779,000 crashes, 28.9% of all US crashes, 20.7% of US fatal crashes)
  • Run-off-road collisions (992,000 crashes, 16.1% of US crashes, 31.7% of US fatal crashes)
  • Collisions with animals (275,000 crashes, 4.5% of US crashes, 0.4% of fatal crashes)
  • Rollovers (141,000 crashes, 2.3% of all US crashes, 10.9% of US fatal crashes)
  • Head-on collision (123,000 crashes, only 2.0% of all US crashes, but 10.1% of US fatal crashes)
  • Collisions with pedestrians and bicyclists (114,000 crashes, only 1.8% of US crashes, but 13.5% of US fatal crashes)
  • Back-up collisions killed 221 people in the US in 2007, and injured about 14,400. This is one of the most common types of non-traffic auto collision in which road workers and children 15 and younger are killed.[14][15]

Rollover, head-on, pedestrian, and bicyclist crashes combined are only 6.1% of all crashes, but cause 34.5% of traffic-related fatalities.

Sometimes the vehicles in the collision can suffer more than one type of impact, such as during a shunt or high-speed spin. This is called a "second harmful event," such as when a vehicle is redirected by the first crash into another vehicle or fixed object.

Country Surface

(thousands of km2)

Population

(millions)

Population Density/km2 Vehicles in circulation

(thousands)

Length

of road network (kilometers)

Circulation

(millions of vehicles x km)

Number of vehicles/100 inhabitants Deaths per million

inhabitants

Deaths per billion km travelled
Austria 84 8.2 97.7 5,279 107,143 82,221 64.5 93.8 9.3
Belgium 33 10.4 320.3 6,159 151,372 94,677 59.1 104.5 11.5
Czech Republic 79 10.2 129.6 4,732 55,495 50,262 46.3 95.8 17.2
Denmark 43 5.4 126 2,570 72,074 47,940 47.3 61 6.9
Finland 338 5.2 15.5 2,871 79,150 51,675 54.7 72.2 7.3
France 551 60.5 109.7 37,168 1,002 486 552,800 61.4 77.9 9.6
Germany 357 82.5 231.1 54,520 626,981 684,283 66.1 74.8 7.8
Greece 132 11.1 84 6,641 40,164 81,635 59.9 149.1 20.3
Hungary 93 10.1 108.5 3,370 180,994 ND 33.4 96.6 ND
Republic of Ireland 71 4.1 58.6 1,937 95,752 37,840 46.7 96.2 10.5
Italy 301 58.1 192.8 43,141 305,388 654,197 74.3 94 8.3
Luxembourg 3 0.5 179.8 358 2,876 2,875 77 98.9 16.0
Netherlands 42 16.3 392.5 8,627 117,430 133,800 52.9 46 5.6
Poland 323 38.5 119.4 16,815 381,462 377,289 43.6 81.3 10.4
Portugal 93 10.5 113.3 5,481 81,739 ND 52.2 118.8 ND
United Kingdom 244 60.2 246.7 33,717 413,120 499,396 56 55.9 6.7
Slovakia 49 5.4 110.1 1,834 17,755 13,402 34 112.6 45.4
Slovenia 20 2 97 1,150 20,196 15,519 58.5 69* 16.6
Spain 505 43.4 86 27,657 666,204 ND 63.7 103.1 ND
Sweden 450 9 20.1 5,131 214,000 75,196 56.8 48.7 5.9
Partial Total Eu (20 countries) 3809 451.1 118.4 269,158 4,631,781 3,451,938 59.7 87.5 11.6
Iceland 103 0.3 2.9 236 91,916 2,006 80.3 64.6 9.5
Norway 324 4.6 14.3 2,938 92,511 36,550 63.6 48.5 6.1
Switzerland 41 7.4 179.6 5,043 71,027 62,685 68 55.2 6.5

Representation of regional death statistics on map reveals significant differences even between neighboring regions.[16]

Source IRTAD for the following data:

  • Number of vehicles: 2005 except Ireland 2003; Luxembourg 2004; Slovakia 2002.
  • Length of the network: 2005 except Hungary and Luxembourg 2004; Germany and Denmark 2003; Slovakia 2002; Iceland 2000; Ireland 2001; Netherlands 1999; Greece and United Kingdom 1998; Portugal 1993; Italy 1992.
  • Distance in Kilometres: 2005 except Denmark 2004; Italy and Netherlands 2003; Ireland 2001; Iceland and Slovakia 2000; United Kingdom and Greece 1998.
  • Population: source IRTAD except for Ireland, Luxembourg, Slovakia, Sweden, Iceland and Norway: source INED.

Deaths edit

Deaths per passenger-kilometer edit

The 28 EU-28 countries, for the 28 members, computed an indicator named "per 10 billion pkm". Pkm is an indicator of traffic volume which is used for not having consistent vehicle-kilometre data. Are counted cars and estimated motorised two-wheelers. In 2016, this indicator ranges from 23 for Sweden to 192 for Romania, with a value of 52 for the EU-28. In Germany, France, the UK and Italy, this score is respectively 33, 46, 28, 44.[17]

Deaths in Europe edit

In 2019, the 27 members states of the European Union had 51 road deaths per million inhabitants.[18] Because the UK had less fatalities than the average EU and due to Brexit; this rate raised to 51. Including the UK, the rate of the 28 would have been 48.[19]

The safest of those 28 nations was Sweden (22 deaths/million inhabitants) while Romania reported the highest fatality rates of the EU in 2019. (96/million).[18]

Deaths in United States of America edit

In 2019, the NHTSA counted 36,096 fatalities in motor vehicle traffic crashes; that is 1.10 fatalities per 100 million vehicle miles traveled.[20]

See also edit

Nations:

Notes edit

  1. ^ "WHO Disease and injury country estimates". World Health Organization. 2014. Retrieved 15 July 2016.
  2. ^ World Health Organization. "Number of road traffic deaths". Retrieved 15 July 2016.
  3. ^ "Global status report on road safety 2015" (PDF). World Health Organization. Retrieved 15 July 2016.
  4. ^ "U.S. vehicle deaths topped 40,000 in 2017, National Safety Council estimates" (Press release). National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Retrieved 3 March 2020.
  5. ^ Dow Chang. . nhtsa.dot.gov. Archived from the original on 31 January 2017.
  6. ^ "Pedestrians become chief victims of road accident deaths in 2008". Archived from the original on 25 July 2009.
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on 25 May 2017. Retrieved 24 October 2009.
  8. ^ "2006 Crash Statistics". NHTSA. 2006.
  9. ^ NCSA Research Note (DOT-HS-810-948). US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. May 2008.
  10. ^ Adams, John. (PDF). University College London. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 May 2015. Retrieved 24 October 2009.
  11. ^ . epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu (statistical database). Eurostat, European Commission. 20 April 2014. Archived from the original on 3 June 2012. Retrieved 12 May 2014.
  12. ^ Vojtech Eksler, ed. (5 May 2013). "Intermediate report on the development of railway safety in the European Union 2013" (PDF). era.europa.eu (report). Safety Unit, European Railway Agency & European Union. p. 1. Retrieved 12 May 2014.
  13. ^ National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Traffic Safety Facts 2005, 2007, P. 54. http://www-nrd.nhtsa.dot.gov/Pubs/810631.pdf
  14. ^ The Risk of Reverse. The New York Times 10 April 2009.
  15. ^ "Building Safer Highway Work Zones: Measures to Prevent Worker Injuries From Vehicles and Equipment" (PDF). NIOSH, April 2001.
  16. ^ "Map of road accident statistics by region in Europe in 2016".
  17. ^ "Mobility and transport". 16 May 2023.
  18. ^ a b "Road safety: Europe's roads are getting safer but progress remains too slow". 10 June 2020.
  19. ^ "Press corner".
  20. ^ "NHTSA Releases 2019 Crash Fatality Data | NHTSA".

References edit

  • "People killed in road accidents". Eurostat.
  • Badger, Emily; Ingraham, Christopher (1 October 2015), "The hidden inequality of who dies in car crashes", The Washington Post
  • Fey A,;Becker IV,;Furlani LF,;Teixeira JVC,;Bahter LCV,;Teixeira JVC. "Perfil epidemiológico dos óbitos em accidentes de trânsito na região do Alto Vale do Itajaí, Santa Catarina, Brasil." ["Epidemiological profile of deaths in traffic accidents in the Region Alto Vale do Itajaí, Santa Catarina, Brazil"]. Revista On-line da Associação Catarinense de Medicina. 2011; V40 N1: 23–27.
  • Fey A,;Enge Junior DJ,;Becker IV,;Teixeira JVC,;Teixeira JVC.; Perfil dos accidentes de trânsito com vítimas fatais do Alto Vale do Itajaí segundo dados dos boletins policiais de ocorrência da polícia rodoviária federal– BR 470, estadual e perímetro urbano de Rio do Sul no período de 2004 a 2006. Revista On-line da Associação Catarinense de Medicina. 2012; V41 N3: 20–25.

epidemiology, motor, vehicle, collisions, also, list, countries, traffic, related, death, rate, worldwide, estimated, that, million, people, were, killed, many, millions, more, were, injured, motor, vehicle, collisions, 2013, this, makes, motor, vehicle, colli. See also List of countries by traffic related death rate Worldwide it was estimated that 1 25 million people were killed and many millions more were injured in motor vehicle collisions in 2013 2 This makes motor vehicle collisions the leading cause of death among young adults of 15 29 years of age 360 000 die a year and the ninth most frequent cause of death for all ages worldwide 3 In the United States 40 100 people died and 2 8 million were injured in crashes in 2017 4 and around 2 000 children under 16 years old die every year 5 Deaths for road traffic collisions per 100 000 inhabitants in 2012 1 no data lt 5 5 10 10 15 15 20 20 25 25 30 30 35 35 40 gt 40 Road fatalities per 1 billion vehicle km in 2004 no data lt 5 0 5 0 6 5 6 5 8 0 8 0 9 5 9 5 11 0 11 0 12 5 12 5 14 0 14 0 15 5 15 5 17 0 17 0 18 5 18 5 20 0 gt 20 0 Contents 1 History and trends 1 1 Deaths in 2005 2 Deaths 2 1 Deaths per passenger kilometer 2 2 Deaths in Europe 2 3 Deaths in United States of America 3 See also 4 Notes 5 ReferencesHistory and trends edit nbsp Annual US traffic fatalities per billion vehicle miles traveled red miles traveled blue per one million people orange total annual deaths light blue VMT in tens of billions dark blue and population in millions teal from 1921 to 2017 See also Automobile safety Safety trends and List of motor vehicle deaths in U S by year Road toll figures in developed nations show that car collision fatalities have declined since 1980 Japan is an extreme example with road deaths decreasing to 5 115 in 2008 which is 25 of the 1970 rate per capita and 17 of the 1970 rate per vehicle distance travelled In 2008 for the first time more pedestrians than vehicle occupants were killed in Japan by cars 6 Besides improving general road conditions like lighting and separated walkways Japan has been installing intelligent transportation system technology such as stalled car monitors to avoid crashes In developing nations statistics may be grossly inaccurate or hard to get Some nations have not significantly reduced the total death rate which stands at 12 000 in Thailand in 2007 for example 7 In the United States twenty eight states had reductions in the number of automobile crash fatalities between 2005 and 2006 8 55 of vehicle occupants 16 years or older in 2006 were not using seat belts when they crashed 9 Road fatality trends tend to follow Smeed s law 10 an empirical schema that correlates increased fatality rates per capita with traffic congestion Deaths in 2005 edit nbsp According to Eurostat the automobile is one of the least safe means of transport if safety is measured as the fewest fatalities per travelled distance Based on data by EU 27 member nations 2008 2010 11 12 Crashes are categorized by what is struck and the direction of impact or impacts These are some common crash types based on the total number that occurred in the US in 2005 the percentage of total crashes and the percentage of fatal crashes 13 Rear impacts 1 824 000 crashes 29 6 of all US crashes 5 4 of US fatal crashes Angle or side impacts 1 779 000 crashes 28 9 of all US crashes 20 7 of US fatal crashes Run off road collisions 992 000 crashes 16 1 of US crashes 31 7 of US fatal crashes Collisions with animals 275 000 crashes 4 5 of US crashes 0 4 of fatal crashes Rollovers 141 000 crashes 2 3 of all US crashes 10 9 of US fatal crashes Head on collision 123 000 crashes only 2 0 of all US crashes but 10 1 of US fatal crashes Collisions with pedestrians and bicyclists 114 000 crashes only 1 8 of US crashes but 13 5 of US fatal crashes Back up collisions killed 221 people in the US in 2007 and injured about 14 400 This is one of the most common types of non traffic auto collision in which road workers and children 15 and younger are killed 14 15 Rollover head on pedestrian and bicyclist crashes combined are only 6 1 of all crashes but cause 34 5 of traffic related fatalities Sometimes the vehicles in the collision can suffer more than one type of impact such as during a shunt or high speed spin This is called a second harmful event such as when a vehicle is redirected by the first crash into another vehicle or fixed object This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information April 2018 Country Surface thousands of km2 Population millions Population Density km2 Vehicles in circulation thousands Length of road network kilometers Circulation millions of vehicles x km Number of vehicles 100 inhabitants Deaths per million inhabitants Deaths per billion km travelled Austria 84 8 2 97 7 5 279 107 143 82 221 64 5 93 8 9 3 Belgium 33 10 4 320 3 6 159 151 372 94 677 59 1 104 5 11 5 Czech Republic 79 10 2 129 6 4 732 55 495 50 262 46 3 95 8 17 2 Denmark 43 5 4 126 2 570 72 074 47 940 47 3 61 6 9 Finland 338 5 2 15 5 2 871 79 150 51 675 54 7 72 2 7 3 France 551 60 5 109 7 37 168 1 002 486 552 800 61 4 77 9 9 6 Germany 357 82 5 231 1 54 520 626 981 684 283 66 1 74 8 7 8 Greece 132 11 1 84 6 641 40 164 81 635 59 9 149 1 20 3 Hungary 93 10 1 108 5 3 370 180 994 ND 33 4 96 6 ND Republic of Ireland 71 4 1 58 6 1 937 95 752 37 840 46 7 96 2 10 5 Italy 301 58 1 192 8 43 141 305 388 654 197 74 3 94 8 3 Luxembourg 3 0 5 179 8 358 2 876 2 875 77 98 9 16 0 Netherlands 42 16 3 392 5 8 627 117 430 133 800 52 9 46 5 6 Poland 323 38 5 119 4 16 815 381 462 377 289 43 6 81 3 10 4 Portugal 93 10 5 113 3 5 481 81 739 ND 52 2 118 8 ND United Kingdom 244 60 2 246 7 33 717 413 120 499 396 56 55 9 6 7 Slovakia 49 5 4 110 1 1 834 17 755 13 402 34 112 6 45 4 Slovenia 20 2 97 1 150 20 196 15 519 58 5 69 16 6 Spain 505 43 4 86 27 657 666 204 ND 63 7 103 1 ND Sweden 450 9 20 1 5 131 214 000 75 196 56 8 48 7 5 9 Partial Total Eu 20 countries 3809 451 1 118 4 269 158 4 631 781 3 451 938 59 7 87 5 11 6 Iceland 103 0 3 2 9 236 91 916 2 006 80 3 64 6 9 5 Norway 324 4 6 14 3 2 938 92 511 36 550 63 6 48 5 6 1 Switzerland 41 7 4 179 6 5 043 71 027 62 685 68 55 2 6 5 Representation of regional death statistics on map reveals significant differences even between neighboring regions 16 Source IRTAD for the following data Number of vehicles 2005 except Ireland 2003 Luxembourg 2004 Slovakia 2002 Length of the network 2005 except Hungary and Luxembourg 2004 Germany and Denmark 2003 Slovakia 2002 Iceland 2000 Ireland 2001 Netherlands 1999 Greece and United Kingdom 1998 Portugal 1993 Italy 1992 Distance in Kilometres 2005 except Denmark 2004 Italy and Netherlands 2003 Ireland 2001 Iceland and Slovakia 2000 United Kingdom and Greece 1998 Population source IRTAD except for Ireland Luxembourg Slovakia Sweden Iceland and Norway source INED Deaths editDeaths per passenger kilometer edit The 28 EU 28 countries for the 28 members computed an indicator named per 10 billion pkm Pkm is an indicator of traffic volume which is used for not having consistent vehicle kilometre data Are counted cars and estimated motorised two wheelers In 2016 this indicator ranges from 23 for Sweden to 192 for Romania with a value of 52 for the EU 28 In Germany France the UK and Italy this score is respectively 33 46 28 44 17 Deaths in Europe edit In 2019 the 27 members states of the European Union had 51 road deaths per million inhabitants 18 Because the UK had less fatalities than the average EU and due to Brexit this rate raised to 51 Including the UK the rate of the 28 would have been 48 19 The safest of those 28 nations was Sweden 22 deaths million inhabitants while Romania reported the highest fatality rates of the EU in 2019 96 million 18 Deaths in United States of America edit In 2019 the NHTSA counted 36 096 fatalities in motor vehicle traffic crashes that is 1 10 fatalities per 100 million vehicle miles traveled 20 See also editRoad traffic safety Management systems for road safety Smeed s law Nations List of motor vehicle deaths in Australia by year List of motor vehicle deaths in Japan by year List of motor vehicle deaths in Thailand by year List of motor vehicle deaths in U S by year and Transportation safety in the United StatesNotes edit WHO Disease and injury country estimates World Health Organization 2014 Retrieved 15 July 2016 World Health Organization Number of road traffic deaths Retrieved 15 July 2016 Global status report on road safety 2015 PDF World Health Organization Retrieved 15 July 2016 U S vehicle deaths topped 40 000 in 2017 National Safety Council estimates Press release National Highway Traffic Safety Administration Retrieved 3 March 2020 Dow Chang Comparison of Crash Fatalities by Sex and Age Group nhtsa dot gov Archived from the original on 31 January 2017 Pedestrians become chief victims of road accident deaths in 2008 Archived from the original on 25 July 2009 365 Days for Stopping Accident Deaths Archived from the original on 25 May 2017 Retrieved 24 October 2009 2006 Crash Statistics NHTSA 2006 NCSA Research Note DOT HS 810 948 US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration May 2008 Adams John Smeed s Law some further thoughts PDF University College London Archived from the original PDF on 2 May 2015 Retrieved 24 October 2009 Statistics database for transports epp eurostat ec europa eu statistical database Eurostat European Commission 20 April 2014 Archived from the original on 3 June 2012 Retrieved 12 May 2014 Vojtech Eksler ed 5 May 2013 Intermediate report on the development of railway safety in the European Union 2013 PDF era europa eu report Safety Unit European Railway Agency amp European Union p 1 Retrieved 12 May 2014 National Highway Traffic Safety Administration Traffic Safety Facts 2005 2007 P 54 http www nrd nhtsa dot gov Pubs 810631 pdf The Risk of Reverse The New York Times 10 April 2009 Building Safer Highway Work Zones Measures to Prevent Worker Injuries From Vehicles and Equipment PDF NIOSH April 2001 Map of road accident statistics by region in Europe in 2016 Mobility and transport 16 May 2023 a b Road safety Europe s roads are getting safer but progress remains too slow 10 June 2020 Press corner NHTSA Releases 2019 Crash Fatality Data NHTSA References edit People killed in road accidents Eurostat Badger Emily Ingraham Christopher 1 October 2015 The hidden inequality of who dies in car crashes The Washington Post Fey A Becker IV Furlani LF Teixeira JVC Bahter LCV Teixeira JVC Perfil epidemiologico dos obitos em accidentes de transito na regiao do Alto Vale do Itajai Santa Catarina Brasil Epidemiological profile of deaths in traffic accidents in the Region Alto Vale do Itajai Santa Catarina Brazil Revista On line da Associacao Catarinense de Medicina 2011 V40 N1 23 27 Fey A Enge Junior DJ Becker IV Teixeira JVC Teixeira JVC Perfil dos accidentes de transito com vitimas fatais do Alto Vale do Itajai segundo dados dos boletins policiais de ocorrencia da policia rodoviaria federal BR 470 estadual e perimetro urbano de Rio do Sul no periodo de 2004 a 2006 Revista On line da Associacao Catarinense de Medicina 2012 V41 N3 20 25 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Epidemiology of motor vehicle collisions amp oldid 1217665171, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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