360 Soziale Probleme und Sozialdienste; Verbände
Schutz von Kindern im Pkw
(1989)
Die Arbeit umfasst eine ausführliche Literaturrecherche und Verkehrserhebungen zu praktischen Fragen des Schutzes mitfahrender Kinder im Pkw. Es wurden an 633 Fahrzeugen, in denen Kinder-Rückhaltesysteme beziehungsweise Kinder vorhanden waren, Erhebungen durchgeführt. Untersucht wurden im ruhenden Verkehr 148 Fahrzeuge, die erkennbar für eine gesicherte Mitnahme von Kindern ausgestattet waren, nach Art, Position und Zustand der Kinder-Rückhaltesysteme. Bei diesen Fahrzeugen ist der Anteil von Kombis mit 20 - 25 Prozent besonders hoch. Detailergebnisse führen zu der Folgerung, dass für Schulkinder die verfügbaren optimalen Schutzmöglichkeiten nicht genutzt werden. Noch höher fällt jedoch das Sicherheitsdefizit für die Kleinstkinder aus: von 56 Säuglingen war nur eines in einer gurtgesicherten Babywanne untergebracht. Aus den Untersuchungsergebnissen werden Empfehlungen zu verbessertem Schutz von Kindern im Pkw abgeleitet, die die Aufklärung betreffen, den gesetzlichen Minimalschutz, die Biomechanik des Kindes, die Prüfvorschriften für Kinder-Rückhaltesysteme, die kostenfreie, zeitweise Überlassung eines Kinder-Rückhaltesystems nach der Entbindung zur Schaffung einer Bewusstseinsbasis für ein lebenslang anhaltendes Sicherheitsbedürfnis, Komfort der Systeme sowie konstruktive Lösungsvorschläge für die Gestaltung von Pkw-Rücksitzen.
The paper gives an overview of the recent (mostly 2012) figures of killed bus/coach occupants (drivers and passengers) in 27 Member States of the European Union as reported by CARE. The Evolution of the figures of bus/coach occupants killed in road accidents urban, rural without motorway and on motorways from 1991 to 2010 in 15 Member States of the EU supplements this information. More detailed are the figures reported for Germany by the Federal Statistics. The paper displays long-term evaluations (1957 to 2012) for killed, seriously and slightly injured occupants in all kinds of buses/coaches. Midterm evaluations (1995 to 2012) of the figures of fatalities and casualties are displayed for different busses according to their identification of road using as coaches, urban buses, school buses, trolley buses and "other buses". To be able to compare the evolutions of the safety of vehicle occupants it is customary to use different risk indicators. Calculations and illustrations for three often used indicators with their development over time are given: fatalities, seriously injured and slightly injured per 100,000 vehicles registered, per 1 billion (109) vehicle-kilometres travelled and per 1 billion (109) person-kilometres. These indicators are shown for occupants of cars, goods vehicles and buses/coaches. For the period from 1957 until 2012 it is obvious, that for all three vehicle categories analysed there was a clear long-term trend towards more occupant safety in terms of casualties per vehicles registered and per vehicle mileage. This was most significant for car occupants but it can be seen for bus/coach occupants and goodsvehicle occupants as well. Figures of killed occupants and of casualties related to person-kilometres are calculated and displayed for the shorter period 1995 to 2012. Here it becomes obvious that the bus/coach is still the safest mode of transport for the occupants of road vehicles. Graphs for the casualty risk indices still show significantly higher risks for car occupants despite the corresponding curve moved sustainable downwards. It is remarkable, that the risks of being killed or injured for the occupants of urban buses is growing whereas the corresponding risk for the occupants of coaches in line traffic tends downwards. The article ends with a short comparison and discussion of the risk indicators which are actually published for the occupants (driver and passengers) of cars and the passengers of buses/coaches, railroads, trams and airplanes. The interpretation of such information depends on the perception and it seems that for a complete view not only one indicator should be used and the evolutions of the indicator values during longer periods (as displayed with examples in the paper) should also be taken into account.
Es erfolgt eine Aktualisierung und Neufassung des von der Bundesanstalt für Straßenwesen (BASt) im Jahre 1978 veröffentlichten Berichts "Nachtunfälle - eine Analyse auf der Grundlage der Daten der amtlichen Straßenverkehrsunfallstatistik" (Brühning, Hippchen und Weißbrodt; 1978). Ausgewertet werden die Unfalldaten seit 1970, im Wesentlichen aber die Daten des Jahres 1985. Nachtunfälle haben innerhalb des gesamten Unfallgeschehens eine besondere Bedeutung. Sie sind im Mittel schwerer als Unfälle bei Tage: über 25 % aller Unfälle mit Personenschaden, aber rund 40 % aller Unfälle mit Getöteten ereignen sich nachts. Fußgänger werden zu 48,7 % bei Nachtunfällen getötet, 43,1 % der getöteten Pkw-Insassen sterben bei Nachtunfällen. Das Unfallrisiko ist nachts erheblich größer als bei Tage. Nachts steigt das fahrleistungsbezogene Unfallrisiko der Pkw außerorts (ohne BAB) auf das 1,7-fache, auf BAB auf das 1,5-fache des Risikos bei Tage an. Neben Angaben zur zeitlichen Entwicklung erfolgt zunächst ein Überlick über die wesentlichen Kenngrößen (Art der Verkehrsbeteiligung, Alter und Geschlecht der Fußgänger beziehungsweise Fahrer, Ortslage, Unfallmonat, Wochentag und Uhrzeit, Straßenzustand, Unfalltyp und Unfallursachen) des nächtlichen Unfallgeschehens. Darüberhinaus wird eine eingehende Betrachtung zu ausgewählten Problembereichen auf der Grundlage von Tabellenanalysen sowie multidimensionalen Analysen mittels Logit-Modellen durchgeführt. Im einzelnen handelt es sich um die Problembereiche "Alkohol", ungünstiger Straßenzustand, junge Fahrer von motorisierten Zweirädern, Pkw-Fahrer und Fußgänger. Desweiteren wird auf regionale Unterschiede nach Bundesländern im nächtlichen Unfallgeschehen eingegangen.
Auf der Grundlage von repräsentativen Befragungen in 15 europäischen Ländern werden Verhaltensgewohnheiten, Einstellungen und Wertvorstellungen der Bevölkerung (inbesondere der Autofahrer) miteinander verglichen. Der deutsche Bericht über die Befragung der 17.430 Autofahrer enthält Detailinformationen zu folgenden Themen: Bewertung der Verkehrssicherheit; Fahrgewohnheiten und Risikowahrnehmung; Fahrleistungen und Wertvorstellungen bei der Anschaffung von Pkw; Einstellungen und berichtetes Verfahren zum Sicherheitsgurt, zu den Fahrgeschwindigkeiten und zum Problemfeld "Alkohol und Fahren"; Bewertung von Verkehrssicherheitsmaßnahmen und Akzeptanz von europa-einheitlichen Regelungen; Einschätzung der Verkehrssicherheit in anderen Ländern im Verhältnis zur Sicherheit im eigenen Land. In aller Regel nehmen deutsche Autofahrer/innen mittlere Positionen im deutlichen Nord/Südgefälle ein. Bei komplexeren Analysen der Daten schälte sich der Einfluss nationaler Regelungen auf die Ausprägung von Verhaltensgewohnheiten und -einstellungen deutlich heraus (zum Beispiel die Relevanz gesetzlicher Gurtregelungen, die Geschwindigkeitseinstellungen in Abhängigkeit von der jeweiligen Regelung sowie eine positivere Einstellung zum Gesetz bei niedrigeren Promillegrenzen).
Um Aussagen über die Entwicklung in der Benutzung von Sicherheitsgurten, Helmen und Schutzkleidung machen zu können, wird mit standardisierten Erhebungsverfahren das Verhalten der Verkehrsteilnehmer kontinuierlich durch die Bundesanstalt für Straßenwesen beobachtet. Die Ergebnisse für das Jahr 1995 zeigen, dass hinsichtlich der Sicherung von Personen in Pkw die Sicherung in West und Ost erstmals auf dem gleichen Stand ist. Allerdings weisen die Anlegequoten für Sicherheitsgurte in den alten Bundesländern Rückgänge auf. In der Benutzung von Kindersitzen konnten im Jahr 1995 nur wenig Fortschritte erzielt werden. In den östlichen Bundesländern nimmt der längerfristige Trend ohne jegliche Schutzbekleidung zu fahren weiter ab. Insgesamt hat die weiter angestiegene Ausstattung von Fahrern und Mitfahrern in den neuen Bundesländern, die geeignete Schutzkleidung tragen, zu einem Stand geführt, der mit dem der alten Länder in etwa vergleichbar ist. Hinsichtlich des Helmtragens bei Radfahrern wurde im Westen eine Stagnation der Quoten und im Osten ein deutlicher Rückgang bei den helmtragenden Kindern festgestellt.
Das neue Forschungsprogramm Straßenverkehrssicherheit 1997/98 der Bundesanstalt für Straßenwesen weist insgesamt 31 Forschungsprojekte vor allem aus den Themenbereichen Basisdaten, Außerortssicherheit, Sicherheitsverbesserungen für Kinder, Verkehrsaufklärung und Fahrausbildung sowie aktuelle Sicherheitsbelange bei Kraftfahrzeugen aus. Die bisherigen Schwerpunkte des Programmes 1995/1996 werden fortgeschrieben.
Es wird über die Ergebnisse eines standardisierten Erhebungsverfahrens berichtet, mit dem die BASt seit Jahren das Verhalten der Verkehrsteilnehmer hinsichtlich der Benutzung von Sicherheitsgurten und von Kindersitzen in Pkw ermittelt. Die Beobachtungsergebnisse des Jahres 1996 und der Stand der Sicherungsquoten in anderen europäischen Staaten werden dargestellt.
Es wird über eine Studie der Bundesanstalt für Straßenwesen zur Wirksamkeit des Pkw-Sicherheitstrainings berichtet. Zur Erfassung kurz- und längerfristiger Wirkungen der Maßnahme wurden eine Vorher- und zwei Nachher-Messungen bei einer Experimental- und einer Kontrollgruppe durchgeführt. Die Verhaltensdaten wurden mittels instrumentierter Messfahrzeuge erhoben. Die Untersuchungsergebnisse in den Bereichen Wissen, Einstellungen und Verhalten werden dargestellt.
Berichtet wird über Wildunfälle in Deutschland im Jahre 1997. Sie werden in der amtlichen Straßenverkehrsunfallstatistik nur berücksichtigt, wenn sie Personenschäden oder schwere Sachschäden zur Folge hatten oder unter Alkoholeinfluss geschahen. Analysiert wurden 3.154 Wildunfälle der amtlichen Unfallstatistik. Die Zahl der Verunglückten je 1.000 Unfälle mit Personenschaden ist bei Wildunfällen geringer als bei sonstigen Unfällen, allerdings ist eine rückläufige Tendenz der schweren Unfälle im Gesamtunfallgeschehen bei den Wildunfällen nicht zu erkennen.
Die Beteiligung von Kleintransportern über 2,8 t bis 3,5 t an Unfällen mit Personenschaden hat sich von 1996 bis 2001 verdreifacht, während sich im gleichen Zeitraum der Bestand dieser Fahrzeuggruppe etwa verdoppelt hat. Nach einem kontinuierlichen Anstieg der Unfallzahlen von 1996 bis 2001 konnten im Jahr 2002 erstmals Rückgänge bei Unfall- und Verunglücktenzahlen von Kleintransportern über 2,8 t bis 3,5 t beobachtet werden, während der Bestand weiter angestiegen ist. Auf Autobahnen waren Kleintransporter an allen Unfällen mit Personenschaden mit rund 1,5 Prozent beteiligt. Mehr als ein Drittel der unfallbeteiligten Kleintransporter und mehr als die Hälfte der dabei Getöteten sind in Abschnitten mit bestehenden Geschwindigkeitsbeschränkungen (einschließlich Baustellen) zu verzeichnen. Die Auswirkungen eines von mehreren Bundesländern und Verbänden geforderten allgemeinen Tempolimits für Kleintransporter auf Autobahnen würde nach den vorliegenden Analysen nur einen geringen Anteil der Unfälle von Kleintransportern und der dabei Verunglückten betreffen.
Über 80 Prozent aller an Unfällen mit Personenschaden beteiligten Kraftfahrzeuge sind Pkw. Für die Beschreibung der Unfallbeteiligung von Pkw unterschiedlicher Fahrzeugtypen und nach unterschiedlichen Fahrzeug- und Haltermerkmalen haben absolute Unfallzahlen jedoch nur eine geringe Aussagefähigkeit. Soll ein Vergleich der Beteiligung unterschiedlicher Teilkollektive von Pkw am Unfallgeschehen vorgenommen werden, so ist das Ausmaß ihrer Verkehrsbeteiligung zu berücksichtigen. Mit der "Fahrleistungserhebung 1990" (Hautzinger et al., 1993) liegen hierzu erstmals auch Fahrleistungsangaben differenziert nach Pkw-Typgruppen und nach Halter- und Fahrzeugmerkmalen vor. Grundlage der Untersuchung sind die Daten der an Unfällen mit Personenschaden und schwerem Sachschaden im Lande Nordrhein-Westfalen in den Jahren 1989 und 1990 beteiligten Pkw, ergänzt um fahrzeugtechnische Angaben des Kraftfahrt-Bundesamtes. Das fahrleistungsbezogene Unfallrisiko (Unfallrate) von Pkw wurde zunächst in Abhängigkeit von ausgewählten Fahrzeugmerkmalen (zum Beispiel Fahrzeugalter, Hubraum, Motorleistung) beschrieben und mit dem bestandsbezogenen Unfallrisiko (Unfall-belastung) verglichen. Danach wurde das Unfallrisiko von 228 verschiedenen Pkw-Typgruppen untersucht. Dabei wurden Zusammenhänge zwischen den Unfallraten der verschiedenen Gruppen, der mittleren Jahresfahrleistung, der Motorleistung und dem Alter der unfallbeteiligten Fahrer deutlich. Um den Zusammenhang zwischen dem fahrleistungsbezogenen Unfallrisiko verschiedener Pkw-Typgruppen und weiteren - nicht fahrzeugspezifischen - Einflussgrößen zu verdeutlichen, wurde anschließend die Pkw-Unfallrate in Abhängigkeit von wichtigen Strukturmerkmalen des Unfallgeschehens (zum Beispiel Ortslage, Fahreralter, Unfallursache) untersucht. Es zeigte sich, dass die festgestellten deutlichen Zusammenhänge zwischen Fahrzeugmerkmalen und Risikokenngrößen beziehungsweise die zwischen verschiedenen Pkw-Typgruppen gegebenen Unterschiede bei der Unfallrate und bei der mittleren Jahresfahrleistung einhergehen mit unterschiedlichen Fahrerpopulationen und unterschiedlicher Fahrzeugnutzung. So ist davon auszugehen, dass Pkw mit bestimmten Fahrzeugmerkmalen beziehungsweise bestimmte Pkw-Typgruppen, die hohe Unfallraten aufweisen, stärker von jungen Fahrern genutzt werden, und die im Mittel niedrigeren Jahresfahrleistungen dieser Pkw-Typgruppen zu einem vergleichsweise geringen Anteil auf den (sichereren) Autobahnen erbracht werden.
The paper aims to study the injury risk and kinematics of pedestrians involved in different passenger vehicle collisions. Furthermore, the difference of pedestrian kinematics in the accidents involved minivan and sedan was analyzed. The 18 sample cases of passenger car to pedestrian collisions were selected from the database of In-depth Investigation of Vehicle Accident in Changsha of China (IVAC),of which the 12 pedestrian accidents involved in a minivan impact for each case, and the 6 accidents in a sedan impact for each. The selected cases were reconstructed by using mathematical models of pedestrians and accident vehicles in a multi-body dynamic code MADYMO environment. The logistic regression models of the risks for pedestrian AIS 3+ injuries and fatalities were developed in terms of vehicle impact speed by analyzing the minivan-pedestrian and sedan-pedestrian accidents. The difference of pedestrian kinematics was identified by comparing the results from reconstructed pedestrian accidents between the minivans and sedans collisions. The result shows that there is a significant correlation among the impact speed and the severity of pedestrian injuries. The minivan poses greater risk to pedestrian than sedan at the same impact speed. The kinematics of pedestrian was greatly influenced by vehicle front shape.
A total survey of road traffic accidents involving most severely injured, defined as sustaining a polytrauma or severe monotrauma (ISS > 15) or being killed, was conducted over 14 months in a large study region in Germany. Data on injuries, pre-clinical and clinical care, crash circumstances and vehicle damage were obtained both prospectively and retrospectively from trauma centers, dispatch centers, police and fire departments. 149 patients with a polytrauma and eight with a severe monotrauma were recorded altogether. 22 patients died in hospital. Another 76 victims had deceased at the accident scene. In 2008, 49 % of patients treated with life-threatening injuries were car or van occupants, 21 % motorcyclists, 18 % cyclists and 10 % pedestrians. Among fatalities at the scene, vehicle occupants constituted an even larger portion. The number of road users with life-threatening trauma in the region was extrapolated to the German situation. It suggests that 10 % among the "seriously injured" as defined in national accident statistics are surviving accident victims with a polytrauma or severe monotrauma.
The share of high-tensile steel in car bodies has increased over the last years. While occupant safety has generally benefited from this measure, there is a potential risk that, as a result, rescue time may increase considerably. In more than 60% of all car occupant fatalities a technical rescue has been necessary. These are in particular those cases where occupants die immediately at the accident scene. Therefore, in these cases "rescue time" is a very sensitive parameter. In addition to the general analysis of the need of technical rescue and the actual rescue time depending on model years, the injury pattern of occupants requiring technical rescue will be analysed to provide advice for rescue teams. Furthermore, a detailed analysis of rescue measures for the most popular car models depending on the safety cell design is given.
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.
In the course of the EUROPEAN PROJECT TRACE all fatally injured pedestrians autopsied at the Institute for Legal Medicine in Munich in 2004 had been analysed by using the "Human Functional Failure (HFF) analysis" method. It was possible to apply this method although some restrictions have to be taken into account. The results derived from this analysis comprise first the failures the pedestrians (most often "impairment of sensorimotor and cognitive abilities") and the opponents (most often " Non-detection in visibility constraints conditions") faced in the accident, second the conflicts and tasks (pedestrian crossing the street conflicting with a vehicle from the side (which was going ahead on a straight road), the degree of accident involvement (pedestrians often the primary active part), and further the contributing factors to the accident (pedestrians most often "alcohol (> 0.05% BAC)", opponents most often "visibility constraints").
Novice drivers are at high risk for crash involvement. We performed an analysis of causations, injury patterns and distributions of novice drivers in cars and on motorcycles in road traffic as a basis for proper measurements. Method Data of accident and hospital records of novice drivers (licence < 2 years) were analysed focusing the following parameters: injury type, localisation and mechanism, Abbreviated Injury Scale (AIS), maximum AIS (MAIS), delta-v, collision speed and other technical parameters and have been compared to those of experienced drivers. In 18352 accidents in the area of Hannover (years1985"2004), 2602 novice drivers and 18214 experienced drivers were recorded having an accident. Novice car drivers were more often and severe injured than experienced and on motorcycles the experienced riders were at higher risk. Novice drivers of both groups sustained more often extremity injuries. 4.5 % novice car drivers were not restraint compared to 3.7 % of the experienced drivers and 6.1 % novice motorcycle drivers did not wear a proper helmet (versus 6.5 %). Severe injuries sustained at a rate of 20 % at collision speeds below 30 km/h and in 80% at collision speeds above 50 km/h. Novice car drivers drove significant older cars. The risk profile of novice drivers is similar to those of drivers older than 65 years. Structural protection and special lectures like skidding courses could be proper remedial action next to harder punishment of violations.
Pedestrian accidents are one of the major concerns related with road accidents around the world. Portugal has one of the highest rates of pedestrian fatalities in Europe. In this paper an overview conditions were the pedestrian accidents occurred in Portugal is presented. In the last years, a project related with the pedestrian accidents has run in Portugal for the period 2004-2006 where 603 people died, 2097 have been severely injured and about 17000 slightly injured. Within this project all the pedestrian accidents in this period have been analysed providing global information about a wide range of aspects, since location, driver and pedestrian characteristics, weather and road conditions, among others. In addition, 50 in-depth accidents have been investigated and the data collected according the Pendant methodology. For this in-depth methodology detailed information about the accident has been collected, including injuries, vehicle damage, road conditions and road user- behaviour and actions. An accident reconstruction has been carried for each case including the determination of the speeds and driver actions, and the analysis of the contributing factors for the accident. Depending of the accident complexity, different methodologies have been used to analyse these accident, from the classical analytical equations such as Simms and Woods, to the use of detailed computational pedestrian models as those included in the commercial software- PC-Crash-® or Madymo-®. Also one of the goals of our investigation is the development of multibody models and methodologies for the reconstruction of pedestrian accidents. Some of these tools integrated in the commercial software Cosmos Motion-® are presented. The advantages of the different approaches are compared and discussed for some of the accidents investigated. With these tools the impact speed can be determined from the projection distance with analytical tools or PC-Crash-®, but more complex tools should be used to determine speed from the injuries, what is especially important for fatal accidents. The influence of the vehicle geometry and stiffness characteristics is another aspect analysed, where the influence of the vehicle stiffness has been determined using a combined multibody-finite elements approach within the software Madymo-®.
One goal of the assessment of the crashworthiness of passenger cars is to characterize the potential of injury outcome to occupants of cars involved in an accident. This can be achieved by the help of an index that puts the number of injured occupants of passenger cars in relation to the number of cars involved in an accident. As a consequence, this index decreases with a lower potential of injury and rises with a higher number of injuries while assuming a fixed number of accidents. Another index is introduced that uses an economical weighting of each injury level. The consequential injury costs are calculated using the average economical costs for lightly, severely and fatally injured persons. The calculation of the safety indices is based on an anonymized sample of accident data provided by the Federal Statistical Office. An index of Mercedes passenger car drivers depending on the year of registration between 1991 and 2006 is compared to the index of drivers of cars of other makes within the same range of registration years.
Today, Euro NCAP is a well established rating system for passive car safety. The significance of the ratings must however be evaluated by comparison with national accident data. For this purpose accidents with involvement of two passenger cars have been taken from the German National Road Accident Register (record years 1998 to 2004) to evaluate the results of the NCAP frontal impact test configuration. Injury data from both drivers involved in frontal car to car collisions have been sampled and have been compared, using a "Bradley Terry Model" which is well established in the area of paired comparisons. Confounders " like mass ratio of the cars involved, gender of the driver, etc. " have been accounted for in the statistical model. Applying the Bradley Terry Model to the national accident data the safety ranking from Euro NCAP has been validated (safety level: 1star <2 star <3 star <4 star). Significant safety differences are found between cars of the 1 and 2 star category as compared to cars of the 3 and 4 star category. The impact of the mass ratio was highly significant and most influential. Changing the mass ratio by an amount of 10% will raise the chance for the driver of the heavier car to get better off by about 18%. The impact of driver gender was again highly significant, showing a nearly 2 times lower injury risk for male drivers. With regard to the NCAP rating drivers of a high rated car are more than 2 times more probable (70% chance) to get off less injured in a frontal collision as compared to the driver of a low rated car.
The fact that ADAC Air Rescue handles approximately 4,000 road accident missions every year gave rise to set up an accident research programme for which ADAC Air Rescue provides its data. This data is of initial informational quality and will be supplemented by data from the police, experts, fire brigades as well as hospitals and forensic institutes. Although the number of cases is still rather low, certain tendencies can be identified. The causes for most accidents occur when joining or intersecting traffic, followed by speeding in road bends and tailgating. Many accidents involve HGV rear end collisions, often causing serious injuries, considerable damage and technical problems for the rescue operations. With regard to the various impact types, it has become obvious that most of the extremely serious injuries are inflicted during a passenger car side impact. In addition, access to and removal of trapped passengers is becoming more and more complicated, partly due to the increasing use of high-strength materials, and rescue operations tend to be more time consuming.
This study is aimed to investigate the correlations of impact conditions and dynamic responses with the injuries and injury severity of child pedestrians by accident reconstruction. For this purpose, the pedestrian accident cases were selected from Sweden and Germany with detailed information about injuries, accident cars, and accident environment. The selected accident cases were reconstructed using mathematical models of pedestrian and passenger car. The pedestrian models were generated based on the height, weight, and age of the pedestrian involved in accidents. The car models were built up based on the corresponding accident car. The impact speeds in simulations were defined based on the reported data. The calculated physical quantities were analyzed to find the correlation with injury outcomes registered in the accident database. The reconstruction approaches are discussed in terms of data collection, estimating vehicle impact speeds, pedestrian moving speeds and initial posture, secondary ground impact, validity of the mathematical models, as well as impact biomechanics.
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.
Detailed investigations and reconstructions of real accidents involving vulnerable road users
(2005)
The aim of this research is to improve knowledge about vulnerable road users accidents and more specifically pedestrians or cyclists. This work has been based on a complete analysis of real accidents. From accidents chosen from an in-depth multidisciplinary investigation (psychology, technical, medical), we have tried to identify the configuration of the impact: car speed, pedestrian or cyclist orientations. Then, we have made a numerical modelling of the same configuration with a multibody software. In particular, we have reproduced the anthropometry of the victim and the front shape of the car. A first simulation has been performed on this starting configuration. Next, effects of some parameters such as car velocity or victim position at impact have been numerically studied in order to find the best correlations with all indications produced by the in-depth analysis. Finally, the retained configuration was close to the presumed real accident conditions because it reproduces in particular the same impact points on the car, the same injuries, and is according to the driver statement. This double approach associating an in-depth accident analysis and a numerical simulation has been applied on pedestrian-to-car and bicyclist-tocar accidents. It has allowed us to better understand the real kinematics of such impacts. Even if this method is based on a case to case study, it underlines which parameters are relevant on a vulnerable road user accident investigation and reconstruction.
In-depth road traffic accident research in Spain is a fairly recent activity. In the past, only accident data that had been retrospectively processed by the national and regional traffic police forces was available. In 1999 Applus+IDIADA set up a permanent accident research unit to carry out indepth analysis of road accidents in Spain. Since then accidents involving cars, motorcycles, coaches and vulnerable road users have been thoroughly studied. The Applus+IDIADA accident research team has carried out work for the various traffic polices in Spain and it is currently involved in several research projects in which accidentology is one of the main tasks. The working methodology of the team is presented in the first part of the paper. In the framework of the European research project "Rollover" (GRD2-2001-50086), Applus+IDIADA has collected data, inspected scenarios and performed virtual reconstructions of twenty-six of the total seventy-six rollover accidents studied. The second half of the paper describes how these accident investigations were used to develop a test procedure for identifying possible improvements to the vehicle structure which augment occupant protection in a rollover scenario. In particular, a proposal for a new drop test for rollover assessment is presented. The cases were analysed for severity, in terms of injury to the occupants and damage to the vehicle, and taking into account whether a seatbelt was worn or not. The worst possible cases were identified as those that had severe occupant injuries and sizable damage to the occupant compartment when seatbelts had been worn. The most severe cases were then analysed further for impact position (roll and pitch angles) and the impact velocity. With these parameters taken into account, the most representative combinations could be found. This resulted in a series of configurations for possible drop tests. The results of the tests indicate where passenger vehicle structures need to be improved in order to increase occupant safety in the event of a rollover crash.
The incidence and treatment of sternal fractures among traffic accidents are of increasing importance to ensure best possible outcomes. Analysis of technical indicators of the collision, preclinical and clinical data of patients with sterna fractures from 1985-2004 among 42,055 injured patients were assessed by an Accident Research Unit. Two time groups were categorized: 1985-1994 (A) vs. 1995-2004 (B). 267/42,055 patients (0.64%) suffered a sterna fracture. Regarding the vehicle type, the majority occurred after car accidents in 0.81% (251/31,183 pts), followed by 0.19% (5/2,633pts) driving motorbike, and 0.11% (4/3,258pts) driving a truck. 91% wore a safety belt. Only 13% of all passengers suffering a sternal fracture had an airbag on board (33/255 car/trucks), with an airbag malfunction in 18%. The steering column was deformed in 39%, the steering wheel in 36%. Cars in the recent years were significantly older (7.67-±5 years (B) vs. 5.88-±5 years (A), p=0.003). Cervical spine injuries are frequent (23% vs. 22%), followed by multiple rib fractures (14% vs. 12%) and lung injuries (12% vs. 11%). We found 9/146 (6%) and 3/121 patients (3%) with heart contusion among the 267 sternal fractures. MAIS was 2.56-±1.3 vs. 2.62-±1.3 (A vs. B, p=0.349). 18% of patients were polytraumatized, with 11.2% dying at the scene, 2.3% in the hospital. Sternal fractures occur most often in old cars to seat-belted drivers often without any airbag. Severe multiple rib fractures and lung contusion are concomitant injuries in more than 10% each indicating the severity of the crash. Over a twentyyear period, the injury severity encountered was not different with 18% polytrauma patients suffering sternal fractures.
The increase in light duty trucks (LDT) on the road in the US is a safety concern because of their aggressivity, or risk they present to occupants of cars, especially in side impacts. We use FARS data to look at fatality trends in frontal and side impacts between cars and LDT. FARS data is also used to determine risk, or fatalities per registered vehicle, imposed on car drivers from other vehicle types. We use NASS CDS data to investigate sources of serious injuries in vehicles with side impact. These sources of injury are categorized into three major groups: 1) contact without intrusion, 2) contact with intrusion, and 3) restraints. We find a greater fraction of intrusion related injuries in cars struck on their side by SUV or pick-up trucks than when they are struck by other cars.