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The accident research of Hanover and (from 1999 on) Dresden registered 736 leg injuries (AIS ≥ 2) from 1983 to March 2007. 174 of these injuries (23.6 %) were fractures or dislocations of foot and ankle. 149 feet of 141 front seat car occupants in 140 cars were affected. Of these 117 were drivers, 24 were front seat passengers. The mean age of occupants was 38.5 -± 16.8 years. Ankle fractures were the most frequent injury (n = 82; 80 malleolar fractures, 2 pilon fractures). 34 fractures and dislocations affected the hindfoot (5 talus and 26 calcaneal fractures, 2 subtalar dislocations and 1 subtotal amputation) , 16 to midfoot (4 navicular fractures, 5 cuboid fractures, 3 fractures of cuneiformia, 2 dislocations of chopart joint, 1 subtotal amputation, and one severe decollement) and 39 the forefoot (metatarsal fractures). Open fractures were seldom seen (2 malleolar fractures, 1 metatarsal fracture). Both feet were injured in 10 cases. 33 occupants (23.4 %) were polytaumatic had a polytrauma, 17 of them died. 81 percent of the occupants were belted. The cars were divided in pre EuroNCAP (year of manufacture 1997 and older) and post EuroNCAP cars (year of manufacture 1998 and newer). Most of the foot injuries were seen in pre EuroNCAP cars. Most of the occupants sat in compact cars (40 drivers and 9 front seat passengers) and large family cars (27 drivers and 7 co-drivers). 49 of 140 accidents occurred on country roads, 26 on main roads and 13 on motorways. The crash direction was mostly frontal. Generally were found no differences of delta v- and EES-level between the injured foot regions, but divided into pre- and post-EuroNCAP cars there was a tendency to higher delta v- and EES-levels in newer cars. The frequency of foot injuries increased linearly with increasing delta v-level; but above delta v-level of 55 km/h the linear increase only was seen in pre-EuroNCAP cars, post-EuroNCAP cars showed no further increase of injuries. The footwell intrusion showed no difference between the injured foot regions but pre-EuroNCAP cars had a tendency to higher footwell intrusion. There were no differences in footwell intrusion between the car types. Only 29 of 174 fractures or dislocations of foot were seen in post-EuroNCAP cars, the predominate number of these injuries (n = 145) were noticed in pre-EuroNCAP cars. A lower probability of long-term impairment was found in post-EuroNCAP cars for equal delta v levels, using the AIS2008 associated Functional Capacity Index (FCI) for the foot region.
Aim of the study was to evaluate the protective effect of bicycle helmets particularly considering injuries to the head and to the face. Accidents with the participation of bicyclists which occurred from 2000 to 2007 were chosen from GIDAS. We observed that injuries to the head and face were more severe in the group of non-helmeted riders. There seems to be no significant difference in injuries with AIS 3-6. Altogether 26 cyclists were killed. 2 of them wore a helmet (1% of helmeted cyclists), 24 did not (1% of non-helmeted cyclists). Only one killed rider (without helmet) did not suffer from polytrauma (only head injuries recorded). The findings seem to support the thesis of a preventive effect of the bicycle helmet, however the two groups are different in their characteristics related to riding speed. Necessarily we need a multivariate model to evaluate the effect of helmets.
Although the statistics show a decreasing rate of child injuries and fatalities in German road accidents more efforts can be made to protect children in cars e.g. by developing appropriate child restraint systems. An important part in of this work can be achieved with the help of crash tests using child dummies. However these crash tests cannot completely reflect the situation of real world crashes as factors like children moving out of the optimal position or children incorrectly fastened by their parents are difficult to predict. Therefore this study gives an overview over the current accident and injury situation of child occupants in cars in German road accidents.
In order to enable foreseeing or comparing the benefit of safety systems or driver assistance systems in Germany, in the United States and in Japan, the traffic accident databases in those three countries are examined. The variables used are culpable party, collision partner, accident type, and injury level and the method to re-classify the databases for comparison are proposed. The result indicates that single passenger car fatality is the most frequent in Germany and in the United States, while passenger car vs. pedestrian is the most frequent fatality scenario in Japan. When the casualty by fatality ratio is focused, the greatest difference is observed in rear-end collisions. The ratio of slight injuries in Japan yields about eighteen times as many as those in Germany, and about eight times as many as those in the United States.
The purpose of this study was to analyse the actual injury situation of bicyclists regarding accidents involving more than one bicyclist. Bicyclists were included in a medical and technical analysis to create a basis for preventive measures and discovered repeating accident patterns and circumstances such as daytime, environment, helmet use rate. Technical and medical data were collected at the scene, shortly after accident. The population was compared focusing on bicycle versus bicycle accidents. Technical analysis included speed at crash, type of collision, impact angle, environment, used lane and relative velocity. Medical analysis included injury pattern and severity (AIS, ISS). Included were 578 injured bicyclists in 289 accidents from years 1999 to 2008, 61 percent were male (n=350) and 39 percent female (n=228). Sixty-seven percent ranged between 18 to 64 years of age, twelve percent each between 13 to 17 years of age and older than 65 years, eight percent between 6 to 12 years and one percent between 2 to 5 years.. Crashes took place in urban areas in 92 percent, in rural areas in 8 percent. Weather conditions were dry lanes in 97 percent and wet conditions in 3 percent. Eighty-three percent of all accidents happened during daytime, ten percent during night, and seven percent during dawn. The helmet use rate was only 7,5 percent in all involved bicyclists. The mean Maximum Abbreviated injury scale, Injury severity score was 1,31. Bicyclists are still minimally- or unprotected road users. The helmet use rate is unsatisfactorily low. The incidence of bicycle to bicycle crashes is high. Most of these accidents take place in urban areas. The level and pattern of injuries is moderate. Most of the more severe injuries occur to the head and could have been avoided by frequent helmet use.
An eCall device has been mounted on some vehicles in France since 2003. It is an integrated car radio/GSM/GPS system that can be used with a SIM card. When an accident occurs, a call can be sent manually or automatically made to a telephone call centre. Knowing the geographic location, the vehicle identity and the possibility of a direct communication with the people involved enables the nearest emergency services to be called out. In this context, the LAB / CEESAR have set up a study aimed at evaluating the effectiveness of this system. The purpose of this paper is to detail the E-call system evaluation method of effectiveness used and give a global synthesis of the results.
Although ATV accidents account for numerous deaths in the US and Australia, the role in traffic accidents and hospital admissions in Germany is unknown. At a level I trauma centre, hospital and crash charts were analysed for medical and technical parameters of ATV accidents. ATV drivers were 0.1% of emergency trauma patients. The mean total hospital stayrnwas 15 days; there were 1.5 stays per patients with 2.0 surgical procedures needed. One patient died, only two recovered fully. 14 cases of ATV accidents out of 18990 (0.1%) were documented within 10 years. The mean impact velocity was 35 km/h. Car collisions were predominant. The upper extremity was the predominant injured region (AIS 0.7), Mean maximum AIS was 1.4. ATV accidents in Germany are rare but pose high risk for severe injuries. Possible reasons are low active and passive security, limited experience and risky driving behaviour. Preventive measures are discussed.rn
Die vorliegende Untersuchung gibt einen zusammenfassenden Überblick über die Leistungen des öffentlichen Rettungsdienstes in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland im Zeitraum 2008/09. Das Forschungsprojekt 87.012/2008 "Analyse des Leistungsniveaus im Rettungsdienst für die Jahre 2008 und 2009" erfasst und analysiert eine repraesentative Stichprobe von Einsatzdaten zur Beurteilung der Leistungsfähigkeit des öffentlichen Rettungsdienstes in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland. Die wesentlichsten Ergebnisse des Forschungsprojektes sind: " Bundesweit werden im öffentlichen Rettungsdienst im Zeitraum 2008/09 jährlich rund 11,4 Mio. Einsätze mit insgesamt 14,2 Mio. Einsatzfahrten durchgeführt. Die Einsatzrate beträgt rund 143 Einsätze pro 1.000 Einwohner und Jahr. " An einem mittleren Werktag gehen bundesweit rund 35.000 rettungsdienstliche Hilfeersuchen in den Rettungsleitstellen ein. Am Wochenende sinkt die Zahl der eingehenden Hilfeersuchen auf rund 26.000 an einem mittleren Samstag und auf rund 24.000 an einem mittleren Sonntag. " 49 % des Einsatzaufkommens werden vom Leitstellenpersonal als Notfall eingestuft, 51 % entfallen auf die Kategorie Krankentransport. " Praktisch die Hälfte aller Notfalleinsätze werden unter Hinzunahme eines Notarztes durchgeführt (Notarzteinsatz). Ein Drittel der Notfälle zu Verkehrsunfaellen (32 %) wird von einem Notarzt bedient. " Das Rendezvous-System hat sich mit einem Anteil von 99,1 % gegenüber dem Stationssystem bundesweit durchgesetzt. " Rund jeder 17. Notfalleinsatz gilt einem Verkehrsunfall, was bundesweit rund 336.000 Einsätzen entspricht. Die Verteilung der übrigen Einsatzanlässe bei Notfällen mit und ohne Notarztbeteiligung beträgt: Internistischer Notfall 46 %, Sonstiger Notfall (z. B. Verbrechen, Suizid, dringende Blut- und Organtransporte) 37 %, Sonstiger Unfall (z.B. Haus-, Schul- und Sportunfall) 11 % und Arbeitsunfall unter 1 %. " Die Verteilung der Rettungsmitteltypen am bundesweiten Einsatzfahrtaufkommen im Zeitraum 2008/09 betraegt: RTW 52 %, KTW 29 %, NEF 18 %, NAW und RTH/ITH unter 1 %. " Beim Einsatzfahrtaufkommen werden rund die Haelfte der Einsatzfahrten mit Sonderrechten auf Anfahrt durchgeführt. Dies entspricht bundesweit jährlich 7,2 Mio. Einsatzfahrten unter Sonderrechten auf Anfahrt. " Das Einsatzfahrtaufkommen weist im Bundesgebiet 2008/09 einen Fehlfahrtanteil von unter 6 % auf. Bundesweit sind dies jährlich rund 808.000 Fehlfahrten. " Die Dispositions- und Alarmierungszeit bei Einsatzfahrten mit Sonderrechten auf Anfahrt beträgt im Mittel 2,1 Minuten. Bei Einsatzfahrten ohne Sonderrechte auf Anfahrt liegt die Dispositionsund Alarmierungszeit im Mittel bei 14,3 Minuten. " Bei Einsätzen mit Sonderrechten auf Anfahrt errechnet sich nach dem zuerst eingetroffenen Rettungsmittel am Einsatzort eine mittlere Hilfsfrist von 8,7 Minuten, wobei 95 % der Notfälle innerhalb von 16,7 Minuten mit einem Rettungsmittel bedient werden. " Die mittlere Hilfsfrist zu Verkehrsunfällen beträgt an Straßen innerorts am Tag 8,8 Minuten und in der Nacht 9,4 Minuten, an Straßen außerorts am Tag 10,4 Minuten und in der Nacht 10,9 Minuten. " Die Unterscheidung der Einsatzzeit nach Notfällen und Krankentransporten unter zwei Stunden ergibt eine mittlere Einsatzzeit von 51 Minuten für Einsatzfahrten mit Sonderrechten auf Anfahrt und 53 Minuten für Einsatzfahrten ohne Sonderrechte auf Anfahrt. " Die Transportzeit bei Einsatzfahrten mit Sonderrechten auf Anfahrt beträgt im Mittel 12,3 Minuten. Bei Einsatzfahrten ohne Sonderrechte auf Anfahrt liegt die Transportzeit im Mittel bei 16,1 Minuten. " Die Verweilzeit am Transportziel/Wiederherstellungszeit bei Einsatzfahrten mit Sonderrechten auf Anfahrt beträgt im Mittel 20,1 Minuten, während bei Einsatzfahrten ohne Sonderrechte auf Anfahrt der Vergleichswert im Mittel bei 15,9 Minuten liegt. " Die weiteren Ergebnisse der Pilotstudie zur Machbarkeit einer Datenerhebung und -analyse über die Ermittlung der Verletzungsschwere bei Verkehrsunfallopfern zeigen, dass die Analyse mittels Daten sowohl zur Rückmeldezahl in Hessen als auch mit Hilfe von DIVI-Notarztprotokollen möglich ist. Dabei ist eine Klassifikation mit Hilfe von Geodaten EDV-gestuetzt umsetzbar, um eine vergleichende Auswertebasis zu bilden.
Who doesn't wear seat belts?
(2009)
Using real world accident data, seat belts were estimated to be 61% effective at preventing fatalities, and 32% effective at preventing serious injuries. They were most effective for drivers with an airbag. Seat belts were estimated as having prevented 57,000 fatalities and 213,000 seriously injured casualties in the UK since 1983. Seat belt legislation was estimated to have prevented 31,000 fatalities and 118,000 seriously injured casualties. A future increase in effective seat belt wearing rate (which takes into account seating position) in the UK from 92.5% to 93% may prevent casualties valued at a societal cost of over -£18 million per year. To target a seat belt campaign, the question "who doesn"t wear seat belts?" must be answered. Seat belt wearing rates and the number of unbelted casualties were analysed. It was primarily young adult males who didn"t wear seat belts, and they made up the majority of unbelted fatalities and seriously injured casualties.
The bicyclist accidents were analyzed to get better understanding of the occurrences and frequency of the accidents, injury distributions, as well as correlation of injury severity/outcomes with engineering and human factors in two different countries of China and Germany. The accident cases that occurred from 2001 to 2006 were collected from IVAC database in Changsha and GIDAS database in Hannover. Based on specified sampling criteria, 1,570 bicyclist cases were selected from IVAC database in Changsha, and 1806 cases were collected from Hannover, documented in GIDAS database. Statistical analyses were carried out by using these selected data. The results from the statistical analysis are presented and discussed in this study.