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In der vorliegenden Multicenterstudie wurde eine prospektive Befragung von Verkehrsunfallopfern, die sich zur stationären Behandlung in einem Akutkrankenhaus befanden, durchgeführt. Ziel der Untersuchung war es insbesondere, Informationen zur Häufigkeit psychischer Auffälligkeiten infolge von Verkehrsunfällen zu gewinnen und Faktoren zu eruieren, die die Entwicklung psychischer Beschwerden im Sinne von Schutz- oder Risikofaktoren beeinflussen. Die Befragung der Verunfallten erfolgte zu drei Messzeitpunkten: Beginn der stationären Behandlung (T1, n=226), bei Entlassung aus der Klinik (T2, n=20) und sechs bis zwölf Monate nach dem Unfall (T3, n=189; T1+T3, n=160). Die Datenerhebung erfolgte mittels Interview, Fragebogen und Auszügen aus der Patientenakte. Prävalenz psychischer Auffälligkeiten: In der untersuchten Stichprobe ergibt sich eine Auffälligkeitsrate von etwa 25%: Jedes vierte Unfallopfer leidet unter ernstzunehmenden psychischen Beschwerden (Angst oder Depression oder PTBS). Bei dem Großteil der Betroffenen sind die psychischen Symptome persistierend. Patientinnen und Patienten mit psychischen Vorbelastungen sind besonders häufig betroffen. Risiko- und Schutzfaktoren: Hinsichtlich der untersuchten prätraumatischen Faktoren (allgemeinen Zufriedenheit, aktuellen und vorangegangenen Belastungen; Kompetenz- und Kontrollüberzeugungen; soziale Unterstützung) scheint der Großteil der Patientinnen und Patienten gute Voraussetzungen mitzubringen, um den erlebten Verkehrsunfall psychisch gut zu bewältigen. Ein jeweils kleinerer Anteil erlangt in den angewandten Testverfahren jedoch auffällige Werte. Diese Unfallopfer sind als Risikopatientinnen und -patienten anzusehen, d.h. die Wahrscheinlichkeit, infolge des Unfalls psychisch zu erkranken, ist bei ihnen erhöht. Als besonders bedeutsam scheinen hierbei aktuelle und frühere Belastungen, geringe internale und hohe externale Kontrollüberzeugungen sowie eine Abnahme der erlebten sozialen Unterstützung im Laufe des Jahres nach dem Unfall zu sein. Als peritraumatische Faktoren wurden die Rahmenbedingungen des Unfalls und das Erleben des Unfallgeschehens sowie peritraumatische Dissoziation und Belastung erhoben. In der Zusammenschau der Ergebnisse kristallisiert sich ein Befund als wesentlich heraus, dem in vorherigen Untersuchungen noch kaum Aufmerksamkeit geschenkt wurde: Das Erleben von Hilflosigkeit während des Unfallgeschehens scheint bei der Entwicklung psychischer Auffälligkeiten eine zentrale Rolle zu spielen. Als posttraumatische Faktoren wurden u.a. Informationen zur Initialsymptomatik, der Verletzungsschwere, dem Behandlungsverlauf sowie der Krankheitsverarbeitung untersucht. In Einklang mit früheren Studien leiden Verunglückte mit einer auffälligen Initialsymptomatik (T1) ein Jahr nach dem Unfall (T3) signifikant häufiger unter ernstzunehmenden psychischen Beschwerden als Unfallofer, die zu T1 einen unauffälligen psychischen Befund haben. Die Verletzungsschwere, die Lokalisation der Verletzung und Behandlungsparameter scheinen im Hinblick auf die Entwicklung psychischer Auffälligkeiten hingegen keine Rolle zu spielen. Hinsichtlich der individuellen Krankheitsverarbeitung scheint ein depressiver Copingstil eher mit psychischen Beschwerden assoziiert zu sein als ein aktives problemorientieres Coping bzw. eine Krankheitsverarbeitung im Sinne von Ablenkung und Selbstaufbau. Vorhersage psychischer Auffälligkeiten: Es wurde eine binäre logistische Regression zur Vorhersage psychischer Auffälligkeiten (T3) durchgeführt. Drei der 12 Prädiktoren erweisen sich als signifikant: psychische Auffälligkeit zu T1, Verschlechterung der erlebten sozialen Unterstützung innerhalb des Follow-up-Zeitraums und psychische Vorbelastung (Psychotherapie innerhalb der letzten zwei Jahre oder psychische Vorerkrankung). Als Fazit kann aus den Studienergebnissen gezogen werden: - Ernstzunehmende psychische Beschwerden infolge von schweren Straßenverkehrsunfällen sind häufig. Es können Risikofaktoren benannt werden, die die Wahrscheinlichkeit erhöhen, infolge eines Unfalls psychisch zu erkranken: Vorliegen einer psychischen Initialsymptomatik, Erleben einer Verschlechterung der sozialen Unterstützung in den Monaten nach dem Unfall und/oder Bestehen einer psychischen Vorbelastung. - Die Relevanz weiterer Risikofaktoren (z.B. Hilflosigkeitsgefühle während des Unfallgeschehens) bedarf vertiefender Untersuchungen. Hieraus leitet sich ein Handlungsbedarf auf unterschiedlichen Ebenen ab. Zum Einen stehen die behandelnden Krankenhäuser in der Verantwortung, gefährdete Patientinnen und Patienten frühzeitig zu identifizieren und geeignete (präventive) Maßnahmen anzubieten. Zum Anderen besteht die Aufgabe im Rahmen der Verkehrssicherheitsarbeit die Thematik weiter publik zu machen und vertiefende Forschung zu unterstützen.
Topics of the status report are: Road accidents in Germany " Socio-economic costs due to road traffic accidents in Germany " Vehicle population and road performance " Electromobility " Alternative power train technologies: market penetration and consequences. The following research subjects are presented: Safety of electric vehicles " Driving dynamics of electric propelled vehicles " New requirements for the periodic technical inspection of electric and hybrid vehicles " Forward looking safety systems " Periodic roadworthiness tests " Cooperative systems: integration of existing systems " Safety related traffic information " Urban space: User oriented assistance systems and network management " Automated driving " Study on camera-monitor-systems " Freight transport " BioRID TEG, dummy harmonization " Frontal impact and compatibility " Child safety " FlexPLI " GIDAS: a blueprint for worldwide in-depth road accident investigations " Druid: Driving under the influence of drugs, alcohol and medicines " Smoke and toxicity in bus fires.
Recent accident statistics from the German national database state bicyclists being the second endangered group of vulnerable road users besides pedestrians. With 399 fatalities, more than 14.000 seriously injured and more than 61.000 slightly injured persons on german roads in the year 2011, the group of bicyclists is ranked second of all road user groups (Statistisches Bundesamt, 2012). While the overall bicycle helmet usage frequency in Germany is very low, evidence is given that its usage leads to a significant reduction of severe head injuries. After an estimation of the benefit of bicycle helmet usage as well as an appropriate test procedure for bicyclists, this paper describes two different approaches for the improvement of bicyclist safety. While the first one is focusing on the assessment of the vehicle based protection potential for bicyclists, the second one is concentrating on the safety assessment of bicycle helmets. Within the first part of the study the possible revision of the existing pedestrian testing protocols is being examined, using in depth accident data, full scale simulation and hardware testing. Within the second part of the study, the results of tests according to supplemental test procedures for the safety assessment of bicycle helmets developed by the German Federal Highway Research Institute (BASt) are presented. An additional full scale test performed at reduced impact speed proves that measures of active vehicle safety as e.g. braking before the collision event do not necessarily always lead to a reduction of injury severity.
Within this paper different European accident data sources were used to investigate the causations and backgrounds of road traffic accidents with pedestrians. Analyses of high level national data and in-depth accident data from Germany and Great Britain was used to confirm and refine preliminary accident scenarios identified from other sources using a literature review. General observations made included that a high proportion of killed or seriously injured pedestrian casualties impacted by cars were in "dark" light conditions. Seven accident scenarios were identified (each divided into "daylight" and "dark" light conditions) which included the majority of the car front-to-pedestrian crash configurations. Test scenarios were developed using the identified accident scenarios and relevant parameters. Hypothetical parameters were derived to describe the performance of pedestrian pre-crash systems based on the assumption that these systems are designed to avoid false positives as a very high priority, i.e. at virtually all costs. As result, three "Base Test Scenarios" were selected to be developed in detail in the AsPeCSS project. However, further Enhanced Test Scenarios may be needed to address environmental factors such as darkness if it is determined that system performance is sensitive to these factors. Finally, weighting factors for the accident scenarios for Europe (EU-27) were developed by averaging and extrapolation of the available data. This paper represents interim results of Work Package 1 within the AsPeCSS project.
In Germany the number of casualties in passenger car to pedestrian crashes has been reduced by a considerable amount of 40% as regards fatalities and 25% with regard to seriously injured pedestrians since the year 2001. Similar trends can be seen in other European countries. The reasons for that positive development are still under investigation. As infrastructural or behavioral changes do in general take a longer time to be effective in real world, explanations related to improved active and passive safety of passenger vehicles can be more relevant in providing answers for this trend. The effect of passive pedestrian protection " specified by the Euro NCAP pedestrian test result " is of particular interest and has already been analyzed by several authors. However, the number of vehicles with some valid Euro NCAP pedestrian score (post 2002 rating) was quite limited in most of those studies. To overcome this problem of small datasets German National Accident Records have been taken to investigate a similar objective but now based on a much bigger dataset. The paper uses German National Accident Records from the years 2009 to 2011. In total 65.140 records of pedestrian to passenger car crashes have been available. Considering crash parameters like accident location (rural / urban areas) etc., 27.143 of those crashes have been classified to be relevant for the analysis of passive pedestrian safety. In those 27.143 records 7.576 Euro NCAP rated vehicles (post 2002 rating) have been identified. In addition it was possible to identify vehicles which comply with pedestrian protection legislation (2003/102/EG) where phase 1 came into force in October 2005. A significant correlation between Euro NCAP pedestrian score and injury outcome in real-life car to pedestrian crashes was found. Comparing a vehicle scoring 5 points and a vehicle scoring 22 points, pedestrians" conditional probability of getting fatally injured is reduced by 35% (from 0.58% to 0.37%) for the later one. At the same time the probability of serious injuries can be reduced by 16% (from 27.4% to 22.9%). No significant injury reducing effect, associated with the introduction of pedestrian protection legislation (phase 1) was detected. Considerable effects have also been identified comparing diesel and gasoline cars. Higher engine displacements are associated with a lower injury risk for pedestrians. The most relevant parameter has been "time of accident", whereas pedestrians face a more than 2 times higher probability to be fatally injured during night and darkness as compared to daytime conditions.
Proposal for a test procedure of assistance systems regarding preventive pedestrian protection
(2011)
This paper is showing a proposal for a test procedure regarding preventive pedestrian protection based on accident analysis. Over the past years pedestrian protection has become an increasing importance also during the development phase of new vehicles. After a phase of focusing on secondary safety, there are current activities to detect a possible collision by assistance systems. Such systems have the task to inform the driver and/or automatically activate the brakes. How practical is such a system? In which kind of traffic situations will it work? How is it possible to check the effectiveness of such a system? To test the effectiveness, currently there are no generally approved identifiable procedures. It is reasonable that such a test should be based on real accidents. The test procedure should be designed to test all systems, independent of the system- working principle. The vFSS group (advanced Forward-looking Safety Systems) was founded to develop a proposal for a technology independent test procedure, which reflects the real accident situation. This contribution is showing the results of vFSS. The developed test procedure focuses on accidents between passenger cars and pedestrians. The results are based on analysis results of in-depth databases of GIDAS, German insurers and DEKRA and added by analysis of national and international statistics. The in-depth analysis includes many pre-crash situations with several influencing factors. The factors are e. g. speed of the car, speed of the pedestrian, moving direction and a possible obscuration of the pedestrian by an object. The results comprise also the different situations of adults and children. Furthermore, they include details regarding influence of the lighting conditions (daylight or night) especially with respect to the accident consequences. In fact, more accidents happen at daylight, but fatal accidents are more often at night. A clustering of parameter combinations was found which represents typical accident scenarios. There are six typical accident scenarios which were merged in four test scenarios. The test scenarios are varying the starting position of the pedestrian, the pedestrian size (adult or child) and the speed of the pedestrian, whereas the speed of the car will not be varied. To ensure the independency from used sensing technologies it is necessary to use a suitable dummy. For example, if sensors are based on infrared, the dummy should emit the temperature of a human being. The test procedure will identify the collision speed as the key parameter for assessing the effectiveness of the tested system. The collision speed is defined as the reduction between initial test speed of the car and impact speed. The assessment of the speed reduction value regarding the safety benefit, however, will be part of a separate procedure.
Topics of this report are: Road accidents in Germany - Socio-economic costs due to road traffic accidents - Vehicle population and road performance " Automotive IT " Electromobility. The following research subjects are presented: Safety of electric vehicles - Forward looking safety systems - Cooperative systems - Safety related traffic information - Freight transport: Action plan freight transport and trial with longer trucks - Lane departure warning systems and Advanced emergency braking systems (AEBS) for heavy duty vehicles - Dummy harmonization " Compatibility - Child safety - Virtual testing - Driving under the influence of drugs, alcohol and medicines - Fire safety of buses - Milled shoulder rumble strips - Conspicuity of powered-two-wheelers - Automatically dipped high beam and rear view mirrors.
Die Bewertung von Projekten im Rahmen von Kosten-Nutzen-Analysen erfordert quantitative Input-Informationen zu den Kosten von Verkehrsunfällen. In der deutschen Bewertungspraxis werden bislang ausschließlich die mittel- und unmittelbar anfallenden monetären Folgen von Verkehrsunfällen quantitativ berücksichtigt, während die immateriellen Folgen wie Schmerz, Leid, Verlust an Lebensqualität bzw. die Zahlungsbereitschaft der Bevölkerung zur Verringerung/Vermeidung dieser Folgen unberücksichtigt bleiben. Die hier vorgelegte Vorstudie fasst den heutigen Stand der Forschung zur Quantifizierung von Zahlungsbereitschaften für die Verkehrssicherheit durch eine umfassende und systematische Übersicht der wissenschaftlichen Literatur zusammen. Die fünf Verfahren hedonische Preisbildung, kontingente Bewertungsmethode, Risiko-Risiko-Analyse, Standardlotteriemethode und Stated-Choice (SC) werden hinsichtlich ihrer theoretischen Fundierung, der verwendeten methodischen Ansätze (Art der Befragung, Modellierung etc.) und den Anwendungserfahrungen untersucht. Unter den verfügbaren Verfahren stellen die SC-Methoden den heutigen State-of-the-Art in der Forschung zur Ermittlung der Zahlungsbereitschaft der Bevölkerung für nicht marktfähige Güter dar. Allerdings liegen die meisten Anwendungserfahrungen mit SC-Ansätzen bislang für die Bewertung der Reisezeit und der Zuverlässigkeit vor. Zusammenfassend ist festzustellen, dass im Laufe der letzten Jahre eine Lücke zwischen dem Stand der Forschung (SC-Methoden) und dem Stand der Praxis (andere Methoden) entstanden ist, die mit Anwendungserfahrungen gefüllt werden sollte. Insbesondere für Deutschland liegt ein wesentlicher Forschungsbedarf vor. Basierend auf diesem Überblick werden daher Vorschläge für die weitere Forschung entwickelt.
Since its beginning in 1999, the German In-Depth Accident Study (GIDAS) evolved into the presumably leading representative road traffic accident investigation in Europe, based on the work started in Hanover in 1973. The detailed and comprehensive description of traffic accidents forms an essential basis for vehicle safety research. Due to the ongoing extension of demands of researchers, there is a continuous progress in the techniques and systematic of accident investigation within GIDAS. This paper presents some of the most important developments over the last years. Primary vehicle safety systems are expected to have a significant and increasing influence on reducing accidents. GIDAS therefore began to include and collect active safety parameters as new variables from the year 2005 onwards. This will facilitate to assess the impact of present and future active safety measures. A new system to analyse causation factors of traffic accidents, called ACASS, was implemented in GIDAS in the year 2008. The whole process of data handling was optimised. Since 2005 the on-scene data acquisition is completely conducted with mobile tablet PCs. Comprehensive plausibility checks assure a high data quality. Multi-language codebooks are automatically generated from the database structure itself and interfaces ensure the connection to various database management systems. Members of the consortium can download database and codebook, and synchronize half a terabyte of photographic documentation through a secured online access. With the introduction of the AIS 2005 in the year 2006, some medical categorizations have been revised. To ensure the correct assignment of AIS codes to specific injuries an application based on a diagnostic dictionary was developed. Furthermore a coding tool for the AO classification was introduced. All these enhancements enable GIDAS to be up to date for future research questions.
Technical progress in automotive engineering focuses at the moment on two competing branches: improving safety and reducing energy consumption. Recent consideration has been given to a third factor, cost to the consumer. Challenges are presented by demographic changes, especially with increasing participation of elderly people in road traffic. The report considers the recent history of road accidents in Germany and statistics relating to vehicle population and road performance. There is a general trend towards decreasing numbers of accidents and their severity. Transport is responsible for roughly 20% of CO2 emissions and approximately 70% of total petroleum consumption. The Federal Government has responded to these challenges by publishing the Freight Transport and Logistics Masterplan in the summer of 2008. It describes the strategic transport policy direction and the key elements of the future course of action which are to be used to ensure the provision of efficient infrastructure and, at the same time, to reduce the amount of energy consumed by vehicles and make transport more efficient, cleaner and quieter. This document contains a number of concrete measures subsumed under the following six objectives: Making optimum use of transport infrastructure - shaping transport to make it more efficient; Reducing the number of journeys - ensuring mobility; Transferring more traffic to the railways and inland waterways; Upgrading more transport arteries and hubs; Environmentally friendly, climate friendly, quiet and safe transport, and Good working conditions and good training in the freight transport industry. Progress in research is outlined in the following areas: Daytime Running Lights for Motorcycles; Safety of hydrogen vehicles - addressing safety and environmental issues by development of a Global Technical Regulation for hydrogen vehicles; Elements of active vehicle safety for elderly drivers; Periodical Technical Inspection of electronically controlled systems in road vehicles - Electronic Stability Control; Pedestrian protection; Crash Compatibility - role of collision partner in passive safety tests; Child safety; Euro NCAP - Child Restraint Systems, and German Field Operational Test on Car-to-Car and Car-to-Infrastructure Systems (SIM-TD). The research project AKTIV - "Adaptive and Cooperative Technologies for Intelligent Traffic" encompasses the design, development, and evaluation of novel driver assistance systems, knowledge and information technologies and is set up to find solutions for efficient traffic management and Car-to-Car and Car-to-Infrastructure communication for future cooperative vehicle applications. The European Statement of Principles on the Human Machine Interface (HMI), presented at the eSafety Conference, which was held in Berlin on 5/6 June 2007, addresses issues such as Real Time Traffic Information (RTTI), Legal issues of Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) and e-security.