html5-img
1 / 29

Road Safety -

Road Safety -. Dr Krishnan Rajam Technical Officer, WPRO WHO. Workshop – interactive format . Basic principles Issues discussed Case studies from countries Need for participants to state personal and national experience ( will not be held accountable ) 5 min break after one hour

hyman
Télécharger la présentation

Road Safety -

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Road Safety - Dr Krishnan Rajam Technical Officer, WPRO WHO

  2. Workshop – interactive format • Basic principles • Issues discussed • Case studies from countries • Need for participants to state personal and national experience (will not be held accountable) • 5 min break after one hour • Slides made available later

  3. 1)“Accidents”, “Injuries”, etc – What causes them?How do we prevent? • Definitions • Causes - “human error?” or “system failure” • “Preventability”

  4. “Accident” – denotes random event, chance occurrence, without pattern/predictability, unintentional nature, cannot be prevented • “Injury” – health outcome, more scientific, predictable because defined risk and protective factors, preventable

  5. Personal Vehicle Environment Pre-event Avoid alcohol consumptionObey traffic lawsSupervised training Daytime headlampsGood tyre, brakes One-way streetsSpecial lanes for motorcyclingClear road signs and signals Event Wear fastened helmetPhysical fitness; exercise, bone strength Good quality, well-fitting helmetLeg guards on cycleHeavy boots and clothing Energy absorbing barriersRoadsides clear of fixed obstructionsGuardrail along cliff Post-event Rehabilitation First aid kitEmergency radio Communication networkTransportation networkEmergency services

  6. 2) How big is the problem • What indicators – deaths, injuries, etc • Why under-reporting in most countries? • How can we assess road safety situation in a country?

  7. Comment

  8. y

  9. Ratio of deaths to injuries

  10. Cambodia – Linkage of health and police data

  11. 3) How do we choose interventions/ decide priorities in road safety?

  12. 3) How do we choose interventions / decide priorities in road safety? • Data and Research • Short and Long term action plan • Education, Enforcement, Engineering (environmental) • Role of different sectors • Ease and Cost of interventions

  13. 4) Data - Malaysia 2009 Lorries / trucks ?

  14. 5) Fleet safety • What factors affect safety of commercial / public transport vehicles?

  15. Fleet safety • Fatigue, working hours, night time work • Use of medication, drugs, alcohol, ec • Condition of vehicles • Economic and Social factors affecting fleet operations and employment

  16. 6) Legislation • Viet Nam – Motorcycle helmet legislation • Malaysia – Rear seat belt legislation • What were the main lessons learnt ? • What issues remain? • What needs to be done?

  17. 7) Activity Short / long term pedestrian safety measures • A 6 year old child dies after being knocked down by a car. She was crossing the road in front of the school at 7pm to catch the bus. • How can we prevent this tragedy?

  18. Pedestrian safety- Short and long term measures • Education ? – not effective • Enforcement – • Long term measures – Environment measures, road crossing facilities, traffic calming, planning of roads/ school location, bus pick up

  19. 8) Research • Why is research important in road safety policy making? • Who does/funds the research?

  20. Road Safety Research • MIROS, UPM, HSPH, NUS, VTI, Sweden • Need to set priorities • Feed into policy and / or evaluate interventions

  21. 9) Public / private transport • Which is safer? • Which is cost effective in the long term?

  22. Singapore’s strategies

  23. Trends in RTI death rates/100,000 pop,selected Western Pacific Region countries

  24. 10) Intersectoral cooperation mechanism for road safety • Agencies within transport – most governments – Australia, New Zealand • Committees in Cabinet – Japan, Korea • Big challenge – How to convince all relevant ministries that road safety is their business too!!

More Related