Nazif-Munoz José Ignacio, Quesnel-Vallée Amélie, van den Berg Axel
Department of Sociology, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.
IRIS Lab, Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Occupational Health, Department of Sociology, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.
Inj Prev. 2015 Jun;21(3):159-65. doi: 10.1136/injuryprev-2014-041358. Epub 2014 Nov 28.
The objective of the current study is to determine to what extent the reduction of Chile's traffic fatalities and injuries during 2000-2012 was related to the police traffic enforcement increment registered after the introduction of its 2005 traffic law reform.
A unique dataset with assembled information from public institutions and analyses based on ordinary least square and robust random effects models was carried out. Dependent variables were traffic fatality and severe injury rates per population and vehicle fleet. Independent variables were: (1) presence of new national traffic law; (2) police officers per population; (3) number of traffic tickets per police officer; and (4) interaction effect of number of traffic tickets per police officer with traffic law reform. Oil prices, alcohol consumption, proportion of male population 15-24 years old, unemployment, road infrastructure investment, years' effects and regions' effects represented control variables.
Empirical estimates from instrumental variables suggest that the enactment of the traffic law reform in interaction with number of traffic tickets per police officer is significantly associated with a decrease of 8% in traffic fatalities and 7% in severe injuries. Piecewise regression model results for the 2007-2012 period suggest that police traffic enforcement reduced traffic fatalities by 59% and severe injuries by 37%.
Findings suggest that traffic law reforms in order to have an effect on both traffic fatality and injury rates reduction require changes in police enforcement practices. Last, this case also illustrates how the diffusion of successful road safety practices globally promoted by WHO and World Bank can be an important influence for enhancing national road safety practices.
本研究的目的是确定2000 - 2012年期间智利交通事故死亡和受伤人数的减少在多大程度上与2005年交通法改革后警察交通执法力度的增加有关。
利用从公共机构收集的信息构建了一个独特的数据集,并基于普通最小二乘法和稳健随机效应模型进行分析。因变量是人均和每单位车辆保有量的交通死亡和重伤率。自变量包括:(1)新的国家交通法的出台;(2)人均警察数量;(3)每名警察开出的交通罚单数量;(4)每名警察开出的交通罚单数量与交通法改革的交互效应。油价、酒精消费、15 - 24岁男性人口比例、失业率、道路基础设施投资、年份效应和地区效应作为控制变量。
工具变量的实证估计表明,交通法改革的颁布与每名警察开出的交通罚单数量的交互作用与交通死亡人数减少8%和重伤人数减少7%显著相关。2007 - 2012年期间的分段回归模型结果表明,警察交通执法使交通死亡人数减少了59%,重伤人数减少了37%。
研究结果表明,交通法改革要对交通死亡和受伤率产生影响,需要改变警察执法方式。最后,这个案例还说明了世界卫生组织和世界银行在全球推广的成功道路安全实践的传播如何能够对加强国家道路安全实践产生重要影响。