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A reduction of around 48% of all road fatalities was achieved in Europe in the past years including a reduced number of fatalities with an older age. However, among all road fatalities, the proportion of elderly is steadily increasing. In an ageing society, the European (Horizon2020) project SENIORS aims to improve the safe mobility of older road users, who have different transportation habits compared to other age groups. To increase their level of safe mobility by determining appropriate requirements for vehicle safety systems, the characteristics of current road traffic collisions involving the elderly and the injuries that they sustain need to be understood in detail. Hereby, the paper focuses on their traffic participation as pedestrian, cyclist or passenger car occupant. Following a literature review, several national and international crash databases and hospital statistics have been analysed to determine the body regions most frequently and severely injured, specific injuries sustained and types of crashes involved, always comparing older road users (65 years and more) with mid-aged road users (25-64 years). The most important crash scenarios were highlighted. The data sources included European statistics from CARE, data on national level from Germany, Sweden, Italy, United Kingdom and Spain as well as in-depth crash information from GIDAS (Germany), RAIDS (UK), CIREN and NASS-CDS (US). In addition, familiar hospital data from Germany (TraumaRegister DGU-®), Italy (Italian Register of Acute Traumas) and UK hospital statistics (TARN) were included in the study to gain further insight into specific injury patterns. Comprehensive data analyses were performed showing injury patterns of older road users in crashes. When comparing with mid-aged road users, all databases showed that the thorax body region is of particularly high importance for the older car occupant with injury severities of AIS 2 or AIS 3+, whereas the body regions lower extremities, head and thorax need to be considered for the older pedestrians and cyclists. Besides these comparisons, the most frequent and severe top 5 injuries were highlighted per road user group. Further, the most important crash configurations were identified and injury risk functions are provided per age group and road user group. Although several databases have been analysed, the picture on the road safety situation of older road users in Europe was not complete, as only Western European data was available. The linkage between crash data and hospital data could only be made on a general level as their inclusion criteria were quite different.
Supported by field accident data and monitoring results of European Regulation (EC) No. 78/2009, recent plans of the European Commission regarding a way forward to improve passive safety of vulnerable road users include, amongst other things, an extension of the head test area. The inclusion of passive cyclist safety is also being considered by Euro NCAP. Although passenger car to cyclist collisions are often severe and have a significant share within the accident statistics, cyclists are neither considered sufficiently in the legislative nor in the consumer ratings tests. Therefore, a test procedure to assess the protection potential of vehicle fronts in a collision with cyclists has been developed within a current research project. For this purpose, the existing pedestrian head impact test procedures were modified in order to include boundary conditions relevant for cyclists as the second big group of vulnerable road users. Based on an in-depth analysis of passenger car to cyclist accidents in Germany the three most representative accident constellations have been initially defined. The development of the test procedure itself was based on corresponding simulations with representative vehicle and bicycle models. In addition to different cyclist heights, reaching from a 6-year-old child to a 95%-male, also four pedal positions were considered. By reconstruction of a real accident the defined simulation parameters could be validated in advance. The conducted accident kinematics analysis shows for a large portion of the constellations an increased head impact area, which can reach beyond the roof leading edge, as well as high average values for head impact velocity and angle. Based on the simulation data obtained for the different vehicle models, cyclist-specific test parameters for impactor tests have been derived, which have been further examined in the course of head and leg impact tests. In order to study the cyclist accident kinematics under real test conditions, different full scale tests with a Polar-II dummy positioned on a bicycle have been conducted. Overall, the tests showed a good correlation with the simulations and support the defined boundary test conditions. Typical accident scenarios and simulations reveal higher head impact locations, angles and velocities. An extended head impact area with modified test parameters will contribute to an improved protection of vulnerable road users including cyclists. However, due to significantly differing impact kinematics and postures between the lower extremities of pedestrians and cyclists, these injuries cannot be addressed by the means of current test tools such as the flexible pedestrian legform impactor FlexPLI. Based on the findings obtained within the project as well as the existing pedestrian protection requirements a cyclist protection test procedure for use in legislation and consumer test programmes has been developed, whose requirements have been transferred into a corresponding test specification. This specification provides common head test boundary conditions for pedestrians and cyclists, whereby the existing requirements are modified and two parallel test procedures are avoided.
Test and assessment procedures for passive pedestrian protection based on developments by the European Enhanced Vehicle-safety Committee (EEVC) have been introduced in world-wide regulations and consumer test programmes, with considerable harmonization between these programmes. Nevertheless, latest accident investigations reveal a stagnation of pedestrian fatality numbers on European roads running the risk of not meeting the European Union- goal of halving the number of road fatalities by the year 2020. The branch of external road user safety within the EC-funded research project SENIORS under the HORIZON 2020 framework programme focuses on investigating the benefit of modifications to pedestrian test and assessment procedures and their impactors for vulnerable road users with focus on the elderly. Injury patterns of pedestrians and cyclists derived from the German In-Depth Accident Study (GIDAS) show a trend of AIS 2+ and AIS 3+ injuries getting more relevant for the thorax region in crashes with newer cars (Wisch et al., 2017), while maintaining the relevance for head and lower extremities. Several crash databases from Europe such as GIDAS and the Swedish Traffic Accident Data Acquisition (STRADA) also show that head, thorax and lower extremities are the key affected body regions not only for the average population but in particular for the elderly. Therefore, the SENIORS project is focusing on an improvement of currently available impactors and procedures in terms of biofidelity and injury assessment ability towards a better protection of the affected body regions, incorporating previous results from FP 6 project APROSYS and subsequent studies carried out by BASt. The paper describes the overall methodology to develop revised FE impactor models. Matched human body model and impactor simulations against generic test rigs provide transfer functions that will be used for the derivation of impactor criteria from human injury risk functions for the affected body regions. In a later step, the refined impactors will be validated by simulations against actual vehicle front-ends. Prototyping and adaptation of test and assessment procedures as well as an impact assessment will conclude the work of the project at the final stage. The work will contribute to an improved protection of vulnerable road users focusing on the elderly. The use of advanced human body models to develop applicable assessment criteria for the revised impactors is intended to cope with the paucity of actual biomechanical data focusing on elderly pedestrians. In order to achieve optimized results in the future, the improved test methods need to be implemented within an integrated approach, combining active with passive safety measures. In order to address the developments in road accidents and injury patterns of vulnerable road users, established test and assessment procedures need to be continuously verified and, where needed, to be revised. The demographic change as well as changes in the vehicle fleet, leading to a variation of accident scenarios, injury frequencies and injury patterns of vulnerable road users are addressed by the work provided by the SENIORS project, introducing updated impactors for pedestrian test and assessment procedures.
Bewertung der strukturellen Substanz für die systematische Erhaltungsplanung von Betonfahrbahndecken
(2017)
"Mobilität ist die zentrale Vorrausetzung für wirtschaftliches Wachstum, Beschäftigung und Teilhabe des Einzelnen am gesellschaftlichen Leben". Dieser Leitsatz des BMVI setzt eine intakte und funktionierende Infrastruktur voraus. Im Kontext mit dem Investitionshochlauf in den nächsten Jahren ist das Bundesfernstraßennetz insbesondere ein netzbezogenes systematisches Vorgehen im Rahmen der Baulichen Erhaltung von Relevanz. Bei der Planung von Erneuerungsmaßnahmen ist dabei die Kenntnis über den Zustand der strukturellen Substanz und deren langfristige Entwicklung von zentraler Bedeutung. Nachfolgend wird ein Verfahren vorgestellt, das die mechanisch und statisch abgesicherte Bewertung und Prognose der strukturellen Substanz von Betonfahrbahndecken ermöglicht. Zudem werden die Anwendung und das Vorgehen anhand eines Praxisbeispiels aufgezeigt.
Im Rahmen eines Forschungsvorhabens an der RWTH Aachen wurden mehrere Spannbetondurchlaufträger bis zum Versagen belastet. Neben umfangreicher konventioneller Messtechnik wurden zusätzlich innovative Messmethoden durch die Bundesanstalt fuer Materialforschung und -prüfung (BAM) getestet. Darunter waren eingebettete Ultraschall-Transducer, deren Daten mit einer neuartigen Methode, der Codawelleninterferometrie (CWI), ausgewertet wurden. Dieses Verfahren detektiert auch kleinste Änderungen im Signal und in der Wellengeschwindigkeit gegenüber einer Referenzmessung. Hiermit koennen Belastungs- und Strukturänderungen sowie Schaeden sehr viel sensibler angezeigt werden als bei konventionellen Ultraschallmessungen. Durch eine Modifikation des Verfahrens mit gleitender Referenz können aber auch starke Veränderungen im Material, wie sie bei Bruchversuchen auftreten, erfasst werden. In den Versuchen gelang es mit Netzwerken aus bis zu 20 Ultraschall-Transducern, Spannungskonzentrationen und Rissbildungen qualitativ zu detektieren und zu verfolgen, ohne dass die Sensoren direkt am Ort der Änderung angebracht werden müssen.
Sowohl im Bereich der invasiven, nicht zerstörungsfrei arbeitenden Methoden als auch bei den zerstörungsfrei und schnellfahrenden Techniken und Methoden ist in den letzten Jahren ein deutlicher Innovationsschub erkennbar. Mit diesen Methoden und Techniken wird das Ziel verfolgt, vergleichbare und hochwertige Substanzbewertungsverfahren sowohl fuer die Objekt- als auch die Netzebene aufzustellen. Der FGSV-Arbeitsausschuss "Substanzbewertung", seine Arbeitskreise, verschiedenste Forschungseinrichtungen und die BASt arbeiten gemeinsam daran, diese Methoden und Techniken zu evaluieren, zu standardisieren und auch neue Methoden und Techniken aufzustellen. Da die Fragestellungen der Substanzbewertung derzeit weltweit ein sehr beachtetes Thema darstellen, erfolgt die Bearbeitung oftmals im engen internationalen Austausch. Der Beitrag fasst den aktuellen Stand der Technik sowohl invasiv arbeitender Methoden als auch der zerstörungsfrei arbeitenden Methoden zusammen und zeigt, welche Potenziale und Grenzen hierbei noch zu bewerten sind. Des Weiteren wird ein Ausblick auf neue Methoden, Forschungsprojekte und Wissensdokumente gegeben.
Die Ermittlung einer voraussichtlichen Restnutzungsdauer von Verkehrsbefestigungen und somit der Abschätzung des Eingreifzeitpunkts für eine grundhafte Erneuerung ist ohne die Kenntnis der strukturellen Substanz nur sehr unzureichend zu bewerkstelligen. Mit Vorliegen des Entwurfs zu den "Richtlinien zur Bewertung der strukturellen Substanz des Oberbaus von Verkehrsflächen in Asphaltbauweise" (RSO Asphalt) ist zwar ein hierfuer nutzbares Verfahren verfügbar, allerdings basiert dieses auf der Analyse von Laborversuchen an den aus Streckenabschnitten zu entnehmenden Bohrkernen, wodurch eine netzweite Anwendung nicht praktikabel ist. Um trotzdem einen umfassenden Einsatz zu ermöglichen und eine deutliche Verbesserung gegenüber bisherigen Verfahren herbeizufuehren, können aber begründete Annahmen zu den Materialkennwerten getroffen werden. Alle weiteren Eingangsdaten des Verfahrens decken sich mit denen des bisherigen. Deren Vollständigkeit und Plausibilität muss zukünftig mehr Bedeutung zugemessen werden.
Der Erhaltungsstau der deutschen Verkehrsinfrastruktur hat mittlerweile ein Maß erreicht, das zu spürbaren Problemen im Reise- und Güterverkehr führt. Insbesondere der Zustand der Brücken und der der Straßen im nachgeordneten Netz ist offensichtlich nicht mehr als gut zu bezeichnen. Die Politik hat nach vielen Jahren, in denen die Schwerpunkte des Handelns und Investierens in anderen Bereichen gesehen wurden, nunmehr reagiert und stellt deutlich mehr Finanzen zur Verbesserung der Verkehrsinfrastruktur zur Verfügung. Dies zum Anlass zu nehmen, schlicht die baulichen Aktivitäten erheblich zu intensivieren, führt jedoch zu weiteren gravierenden Beeinträchtigungen der Verfügbarkeit des Verkehrsnetzes. Gefragt sind Anstrengungen, die zu einer Verbesserung der Qualitäten im Straßenbau und damit zu einer Verlängerung der Nutzungsdauern von Schichten und ganzen Befestigungen beitragen, um langfristig eine Reduktion der Beeinträchtigungen für den Verkehr zu erwirken.
Chronic non-cancer pain (CNCP) is a major health problem. Patients are increasingly treated with chronic opioid therapy (COT). Several laboratory studies have demonstrated that long-term use of opioids does not generally impair driving related skills. But there is still a lack of studies investigating on-the-road driving performance in actual traffic. The present study assessed the impact of COT on road-tracking and car-following performance in CNCP patients. Twenty CNCP patients, long-term treated with stable doses of opioid analgesics, and 19 healthy controls conducted standardized on-the-road driving tests in normal traffic. Performance of controls with a blood alcohol concentration (BAC) of 0.5 g/L was used as a reference to define clinically relevant changes in driving performance. Standard Deviation of Lateral Position (SDLP), a measure of road-tracking control, was 2.57 cm greater in CNCP patients than in sober controls. This difference failed to reach statistical significance in a superiority test. Equivalence testing indicated that the 95% CI around the mean SDLP change was equivalent to the SDLP change seen in controls with a BAC of 0.5 g/L and did not include zero. When corrected for age differences between groups the 95% CI widened to include both the alcohol reference criterion and zero. No difference was found in car-following performance. Driving performance of CNCP patients did not significantly differ from that of controls due to large inter-individual variations. Hence in clinical practice determination of fitness to drive of CNCP patients who receive opioid treatments should be based on an individual assessment.
As bearing capacity measurements become more and more important, the necessity of assuring quality by establishing a QA system becomes more relevant. Within this context, the FGSV recommends the introduction of comparative measurements. Since 2015, two pilot events took place, with the main aim of introducing repetitive comparative measurements, in which all FWD operators shall participate. The results of the comparative measurements show that the basic principles behind comparative measurements (of the FWD), elaborated as a Europe-wide consensus and put into practice in the Netherlands and the United Kingdom, are valid, but still there is a variety of questions to be answered concerning certain details of the measuring system itself, e. g. measurement of the temperatures (air, pavement) and the impact of load introduction. All in all, the two pilot events in 2015 and 2016 proved that the comparability of the different FWD measuring devices is satisfactory.