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Das einwohnerbezogene Risiko, im Laufe eines Jahres im Straßenverkehr zu sterben, steigt bei Kindern und Jugendlichen von 17 Getöteten je 1 Mio. Einwohner im Kindesalter über, 112 Getötete je 1 Mio. Einwohner im Alter von 15 bis 17 Jahren bis zu 207 Getötete je 1 Mio. Einwohner und Jahr im Alter zwischen 18 und 24 Jahren. Das ist ein Anstieg um das 12fache. Vor diesem Hintergrund wird im Programm für mehr Sicherheit im Straßenverkehr des BMVBW des Jahres 2001, (Seite 14) gefordert ...Verkehrserziehung in der Schule in allen Jahrgangsstufen durchführen... Die Ergebnisse der Studie "Verkehrserziehung in der Sekundarstufe" stellten die Grundlage dieses Kolloquiums dar. Rund hundert Experten aus dem Bereich Verkehrserziehung nahmen an der Veranstaltung teil, darunter die für Verkehrserziehung zuständigen Referenten der Länder, Fachberater für Verkehrserziehung, Lehrer und Polizeibeamte und zahlreiche Vertreter wissenschaftlicher Institute, der Lehrerfortbildung und der Verbände, die sich mit der Verkehrs- und Mobilitätserziehung befassen. Horst Weishaupt präsentierte die Ergebnisse der von der Bundesanstalt für Straßenwesen in Auftrag gegebenen Studie zur Situation der Verkehrserziehung in der Sekundarstufe. Dabei stellte er unter anderem dar, dass die Verkehrserziehung im Denken vieler Lehrer und Lehrerinnen keine wesentliche Rolle spielt. Er verwies aber auch darauf, dass die Situation der Verkehrserziehung je nach Schulart, Jahrgangsstufe, Größe der Schule und Bevölkerungsdichte unterschiedlich ist. Horst Roselieb vom niedersächsischen Kultusministerium hinterfragte die KMK-Empfehlungen für Verkehrserziehung von 1994 vor dem Hintergrund der "Weishauptstudie". In seinem Vortrag "Vom Ringen der Schulen um Wirksamkeit" betrachtete Michael Felten die Ergebnisse der Studie aus der Sicht des Lehrers und vor dem Hintergrund der allgemeinen Diskussion um den Zustand der Schule von heute. Er plädierte dafür, die Schüler stärker zu fordern und über den sich einstellenden Lernerfolg die Freude an der Leistung und am Lernen zu erhöhen. In Workshops wurden die Ergebnisse der Studie diskutiert. In Workshop I: "Verkehrs- und Mobilitätserziehung in der Sekundarstufe: Chancen, Ziele, Grenzen" forderten die Teilnehmer - den Stellenwert der Verkehrs- und Mobilitätserziehung künftig zu erhöhen. - Die Empfehlungen für Verkehrserziehung der KMK auf Umsetzbarkeit und Akzeptanz in der Lehrerschaft zu überprüfen. - Klarheit hinsichtlich der wesentlichen Inhalte, Ziele und Methoden der Verkehrs-/Mobilitätserziehung zu schaffen. - Verkehrs- und Mobilitätserziehung in den Lehrplänen aller Bundesländer zu verankern. - Inhalte der Verkehrs-/Mobilitätserziehung überprüfbar zu machen. - Verkehrserziehung in die Lehrerausbildung zu integrieren. - Die Lehrerfortbildung zu verstärken. - Verkehrserziehung als kontinuierliche Aufgabe zu verstehen, die alle Altersgruppen einschließt. Die Teilnehmer am Workshop II "Unterrichtsangebote für Verkehrs- und Mobilitätserziehung durch Verbände und Verlage" kamen unter anderem zu folgenden Ergebnissen: - Angebote für Verkehrs- und Mobilitätserziehung sollten folgende Kriterien erfüllen: -- schneller und wiederholbarer Einsatz, -- geringer Organisationsaufwand, -- kurze Vorbereitungszeit, - Angebote sollten moderne Anspracheformen beinhalten: -- Gruppenerfahrung fördern, -- aktive Mitarbeit beinhalten, -- praktische Erfahrungen einbeziehen, - In der Aus-, Fort- und Weiterbildung der Lehrer muss Verkehrs- und Mobilitätserziehung inhaltlich und methodisch einbezogen werden. Im Workshop III "Wissenschaftliche Studien an Schulen" wurde unter anderem gefordert bei der Durchführung bundesweiter Studien - die Genehmigungsverfahren anzugleichen, -und gegebenenfalls Standards für den Datenschutz zu schaffen. Insgesamt fand das Kolloquium bei den Teilnehmern eine sehr positive Resonanz. Auf der Basis der erarbeiteten Anregungen zur Verbesserung der Verkehrserziehung an weiterführenden Schulen, sollen jetzt in einer Arbeitsgruppe der Bundesanstalt für Straßenwesen, in der alle für Verkehrserziehung zuständigen Referenten der Länder vertreten sind, umsetzbare Lösungsvorschläge erarbeitet werden.
In recent years considerable progress in active and passive safety of road vehicles has been made. The road traffic of today is much safer than in the past. A current vehicle has a lot more safety elements resulting in an improved inner and outer technique. In most European countries the number of fatalities is decreasing despite growing traffic and road usage. Nevertheless, the number of casualties in road traffic accidents is high enough, thus more progress is needed if the number of fatalities is to be reduced by 50%, as postulated by the European Commission for the year 2010. In order to develop countermeasures and further possibilities for injury prevention, it is increasingly important to have accident data available, supplying results quickly and giving the best overview across Europe. In-Depth-Data Sampling Procedures have a huge historical development, starting in the 60ies by the car manufactures, continued during the 70ies mostly by some universities mainly in England, Sweden, France and Germany, today a net of in-depth-investigation teams are working across Europe and around the world.One of the oldest teams is located at the Hannover Medical School, founded in 1973 by the German Government on behalf of the Federal Highway Research Institute Bast. It was the only team worldwide that was equipped with blue light emergency cars, working on scene in time so directly after the event and working continuously during the years, collecting 20 thousand accidents within 30 years period. Since 1999 the order is carried out in cooperation with the German car industry, which is interested and has benefit on the data too. On the basis of the new data collection, so called GIDAS (German In-Depth Accident Study), that has been run at the Technical University Dresden and the Medical University Hannover), a special tool for In-Depth-Accident Analysis was founded. It is the task of this conference to build a platform for such research based on In-Depth-Investigation. The conference is specially aimed at the area of accident data analysis in order to contribute to the harmonization of different investigation methods and accumulation of different results that does exist for different countries worldwide. Up to now no special conference did exist to deal with accident data only following in the discussion for an improvement in traffic and vehicle safety. ESAR - expert symposium on accident research - should be a step forward. This first international conference is being organized by the Accident Research Unit at the Medical University Hannover jointly with the German Federal Highway Research Institute Bast and the Research Association of German Car Manufacturers FAT. The conference should be a platform for an interdisciplinary exchange of information based on the different presentations from participants around the world.
Die Deutsche Gesellschaft für Verkehrsmedizin beschäftigt sich satzungsgemäß mit der Unfallursachenforschung, der Unfallrekonstruktion sowie den physiologischen und psychologischen Voraussetzungen beim Betrieb von Kraftfahrzeugen aller Art und den Leistungseinschränkungen in Abhängigkeit von Lebensalter, Krankheit, Arzneimitteln sowie psychotropen Substanzen. Neben Alkohol als nach wie vor prädominierender psychotroper Substanz nehmen Drogen und Medikamente, hier vor allem Cannabis, heute einen zunehmenden Stellenwert ein. Daher wurde auf der 33. Jahrestagung der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Verkehrsmedizin der Einfluss von Cannabis auf die Fahrsicherheit und Fahreignung aus Sicht der beteiligten Fachdisziplinen (Medizin, insbesondere Rechtsmedizin; Toxikologie; Psychologie) diskutiert. Kontroversen ergaben sich zu möglichen Grenzwerten absoluter Fahruntüchtigkeit bei Cannabiskonsum, während sich zur Fahreignung nach Cannabiskonsum ein homogeneres Meinungsbild abzeichnete. Vor der zunehmenden Alterspyramide sind die Auswirkungen von Erkrankungen auf Fahreignung und Fahrtüchtigkeit von nach wie vor aktueller Relevanz - auch im Hinblick auf neü Therapiemaßnahmen. Daher wurden auf der 33. Jahrestagung der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Verkehrsmedizin aus der Sicht klinischer Disziplinen die verkehrsmedizinische Relevanz großer Krankheitsgruppen erörtert und vor dem Hintergrund neuer Erkenntnisse zur Pathogenese und Therapie Begutachtungsleitlinien diskutiert, die teilweise bislang gültige Richtlinien modifizieren. Dies gilt vor allen Dingen für Herz-Kreislauf-Erkrankungen, das Schlaf-Apnoe-Syndrom, den Diabetes mellitus, Anfallsleiden etc. Weitere Schwerpunkte waren die Ermüdung sowie die methodischen Probleme, die sich beim Zusammenwirken von Krankheiten und einer zur Behebung der Krankheitssymptome indizierten Arzneimitteltherapie und ihren jeweiligen Auswirkungen auf die Fahrsicherheit und -eignung ergeben. Zahlreiche weitere Vorträge beschäftigen sich mit der Traumatomechanik, Verletzungsrisiken neuartiger Fahrzeuge (Quads), der Epidemiologie der suchtstoffabhängigen Beeinträchtigung der Verkehrstüchtigkeit und dem beweissicheren Wirkungs- und Substanznachweis. Mehrere Beiträge befassten sich darüber hinaus mit der Begutachtung der Fahreignung aus medizinischer und psychologischer Sicht. Die insgesamt 66 Vorträge auf dem 33. Kongress der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Verkehrsmedizin spiegeln aktuelle Diskussionen und künftige Entwicklungen innerhalb der Verkehrsmedizin wider.
In order to improve the protection of children transported in cars, within the CHILD programme (GR3D-CT2002-00791) real world road accidents are thoroughly analysed and then reconstructed in laboratory. Prior to comparing injury severities of real victims to physical parameter values measured on the dummies, the quality of the reconstructions is evaluated by experts who use their experience based on the investigation of numerous and various accidents. This paper presents a new tool aiming at better evaluating and validating accident reconstructions. It is based on statistical evaluation of vehicle deformations which gives weighing factors for every part of the car body structure finally leading to a specific Reconstruction Quality Score (RQS indicator). Furthermore, the reliability of this score, depending on the number of measured points, can be established. This tool includes a function aiming at adjusting the speed for a further reconstruction and at defining the launching speed and the pulse shape for complementary sled tests. Finally, the functions of the RQS software and database are presented.
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 average CO2 concentrations relevant to a motorcyclist wearing an integral helmet were measured twenty years ago and found to be alarmingly high. The present study examined gas concentrations typically inhaled by a motorcyclist. Average concentrations of CO2 for persons (n=4) wearing integral motorcycle helmets were measured in the laboratory and the field to facilitate comparison to previous work, and similarly high average concentrations were found: above 2% when stationary, well below 1% for speeds of 50km/h or more. Detailed measurements of the time-dependent CO2 concentrations during normal inhalation showed levels of about half of the corresponding average concentrations, including 1% at standstill, though higher concentrations (4% or more) are inhaled at the beginning of each breath. Opening the visor at standstill lowered the average inhaled concentration only to about 0.8%. The oxygen deficiency is equal to the CO2 concentration, and could also contribute negatively to motorcyclist cognitive abilities.
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.
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.
This paper set out to examine the possibilities for injury avoidance implications for older drivers in crashes, based on crash and injury patterns among older drivers and current trends in ageing in most western societies. A number of safety technologies were identified and discussed which have potential for improving vehicle older driver crash avoidance and crashworthiness. While there were some promising estimates available of the likely benefits of this technology for improving safety, it is evident that they need to be confirmed for older drivers, given their age-related disabilities and sensory limitations. Further research is urgently required to ensure that these technologies yield safety benefits without any disbenefits for older drivers.rn
The data situation for quantifying the proportion of accidents avoided by the introduction of active safety systems is incomplete, since there is generally no data available on the accidents avoided by the technology in question. In this paper, a split-register approach is suggested and compared with the classical case-control approach known from epidemiologic applications. Provided a set of assumptions hold, which can reasonably be made in such data situations, the split register approach allows inferences on the population accident risk. For both approaches the benefits of basing the analysis on the results of a logistic regression to adjust for confounding factors are outlined. The biasing effects of violating key assumptions are discussed and the split-register approach is demonstrated using the example of the active safety system ESP with data from the German in-depth accident study GIDAS.
Rollover scenarios in Europe
(2005)
Rollover accidents seem to be a rising problem in Europe and therefore the systematic of this accident scenario should be investigated. Based on statistical investigations on major European accident databases for different countries a series of 73 real world rollover accidents was analysed. These cases were reconstructed using PC-Crash and preliminary categorised using a modified USbased rollover classification. In a first step, the rollover events were reconstructed from the point of conflict to the vehicle- rest position. The vehicles kinematics as well as its linear and rotational velocities were derived. In a second step typical velocity characteristics as well as kinematics were identified and the events categorised according to these criteria. Based on these results four main categories were defined, covering all reconstructed accidents. This categorisation was based on mechanical parameters (rotatory and translator kinematical data of the vehicle). Significant differences can be seen for different scenarios for the "first phase of rollover".
Because of actual developments and the continuous increase in the field of drive assistant systems, representative and detailed investigations of accident databases are necessary. This lecture describes the possibility to estimate the potential of primary and secondary safety measures by means of a computerized case by case analysis. Single primary or secondary safety measures as well as a combination of both are presented. The method is exemplarily shown for the primary safety measure "Brake Assist" in pedestrian accidents. Regarding accident prevention only the primary safety measure is determined.
The so-called "seat-belt injuries" or "seat-belt syndromes", described as 2-point seat-belt injuries, contain heavy inflection injuries of the lumbal spinal column, combined with heavy abdominal injuries as rupture of the upper intestinal bold or heavy injuries of the upper entrails. With "playing" children in the font of the car, with inappropriate plant of 3-point belts, identical injuries can occur.
Data concerning accidents involving personal injury which have been collected in the context of in-depth investigations on scene in the Hannover area since 1973 and in the Dresden area since 1999 represent an important basis for empirical traffic safety research. At national and international level various analyses and comparisons are carried out on the basis of "in-depth data" from the above mentioned investigations. In-depth data play a decisive role e.g. within the validation of EuroNCAP results on secondary safety (crashworthiness) of individual passenger car models. Thus, statistically sound methods of data analysis and population parameter estimation are of high importance. Since the 1st of August 1984 the "in-depth investigations on scene" in the Hannover area have been carried out according to a sampling plan developed by HAUTZINGER in the context of a research project on behalf of BASt. In the meantime a second region of in-depth investigation on scene was added with surveys in Dresden and the surrounding area. Internationally, the acronym GIDAS (German In-Depth Accident Study) is commonly used for the two above mentioned surveys. The objective of a current research project (topic of this contribution) is, among other things, to examine and adjust the previous weighting and expansion method for the two regional accident investigations to the current general conditions.
Interaction of road environment, vehicle and human factors in the causation of pedestrian accidents
(2005)
The UK On-the-Spot project (OTS) completed over 1500 in-depth investigations of road accidents during 2000-2003 and is continuing for a further 3 years. Cases were sampled from two regions of England using rotating shifts to cover all days of the week and all hours of the day and night. Research teams were dispatched to accidents notified to police during the shifts; arrival time to the scene of the accident was generally less than 20 minutes. The methodology of OTS includes sophisticated systems for describing accident causation and the interaction of road, vehicle and human factors. The purpose of this paper is to describe and illustrate these systems by reference to pedestrian accidents. This type of analysis is intended to provide an insight into how and why pedestrian accidents occur in order to assist the development of effective road, vehicle and behavioural countermeasures.
This paper reviews briefly the evolution of the investigation of transport accidents from the early beginnings when individual events were studied but systematic data was not collected. In the transport modes other than on the roads, accident investigation early on, even of single events, was important in introducing safety improvements. Road accidents, however, evolved enormously with the growth of car ownership without any comparable political response to the consequent deaths and injuries, equivalent to what happened with the other modes. From the 1950s data bases started to contribute to our knowledge of the epidemiology of road traffic injuries, and in-depth sample studies have contributed much to the body of knowledge in the last 30 years. However, even the basic input and output variables of a crash, its severity and the seriousness of the outcomes in terms of injuries and their consequences are not complete or agreed upon. Issues of experimental design and sampling are discussed. It is proposed that the most important area for current research to address is the effect of population variations on injury outcomes. The need for the establishment of good data bases for active safety issues is emphasised with the consequent need for better links between the research community and the police.
Pelvic fracture, cracking or breaking of a portion of the pelvis are extremely common injuries in the side impact collisions of motor vehicles. Due to both its shape and structural architecture, mechanics of the pelvic bone is complicated. There is a lack of knowledge regarding the dynamic behavior of the pelvis and its biomechanical tolerance under impact environment. Hence this study is aimed at the understanding of the mechanical response of the human pelvis with three-dimensional finite element (FE) models, under side impact load, applied through a structure, equivalent to a car door. The door structure was modeled, considering few layers, consisting of foam (Styrodur®, 3035 CS), plastic (UHMWPE), steel, glass and steel, putting them in series. A soft tissue layer (equivalent to fat) was also considered on the greater trochanter location. These FE models (with and without the car door structure) were analyzed with ANSYS-LS-DYNA-® dynamic finite element software to compare the effect of the car door padding system for shock absorption. It was observed that with proper combination of shock absorbing material (foam, etc.) and its thickness, the transmission of impact load to the body part (pelvis, etc.) from the outer surface of the car door could be reduced.
Motorcycle riders are one of the most vulnerable road users. Annually, on estimate 6000 people are killed in motorcycle accidents in the former 15 EU countries. The objective of this research was to investigate and analyze the main aspects and causes of this vulnerability and the accidents in general. For this aim around 70 accidents in The Netherlands were investigated in the framework of an international research program (MAIDS). Also a control group of motorcycles with riders was investigated so that exposure could be taken into account. An important result is that human failure is in 82% of the cases the main cause of the accident, in 52% this is due the other vehicle driver. Perception and decision failures are the most common failures. The most injuries are caused by the environment but they are typically only less severe (AIS1). Injuries caused by the car (front and side) are typically severe injuries (AIS4+). Previous convictions of the MC rider seem to be related to the chance to get involved in an accident. It was shown that the Dutch and the total MAIDS accident sample are comparable.
This report gives an overview of pedestrian accidents on Japanese roads. Database used for the analysis is national traffic accident data based on police reports. Relevant measures and background information ranging from vehicle safety, engineering and education are briefly reviewed, and area for further improvement is discussed.rn