Zhu He, Wilson Fernando A, Stimpson Jim P
Department of Health Services Research and Administration, College of Public Health, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, Nebraska, USA.
Inj Prev. 2015 Jun;21(3):153-8. doi: 10.1136/injuryprev-2014-041314. Epub 2014 Dec 15.
Economic factors such as rising gasoline prices may contribute to the crash trends by shaping individuals' choices of transportation modalities. This study examines the relationship of gasoline prices with fatal and non-fatal motorcycle injuries.
Data on fatal and non-fatal motorcycle injuries come from California's Statewide Integrated Traffic Records System for 2002-2011. Autoregressive integrated moving average (ARIMA) regressions were used to estimate the impact of inflation-adjusted gasoline price per gallon on trends of motorcycle injuries.
Motorcycle fatalities and severe and minor injuries in California were highly correlated with increasing gasoline prices from 2002 to 2011 (r=0.76, 0.88 and 0.85, respectively). In 2008, the number of fatalities and injuries reached 13,457--a 34% increase since 2002, a time period in which inflation-adjusted gasoline prices increased about $0.30 per gallon every year. The majority of motorcycle riders involved in crashes were male (92.5%), middle-aged (46.2%) and non-Hispanic white (67.9%). Using ARIMA modelling, we estimated that rising gasoline prices resulted in an additional 800 fatalities and 10,290 injuries from 2002 to 2011 in California.
Our findings suggest that increasing gasoline prices led to more motorcycle riders on the roads and, consequently, more injuries. Aside from mandatory helmet laws and their enforcement, other strategies may include raising risk awareness of motorcyclists and investment in public transportation as an alternative transportation modality to motorcycling. In addition, universally mandated training courses and strict licensing tests of riding skills should be emphasised to help reduce the motorcycle fatal and non-fatal injuries.
汽油价格上涨等经济因素可能通过影响个人交通方式的选择,对事故趋势产生影响。本研究探讨汽油价格与摩托车致命伤和非致命伤之间的关系。
2002年至2011年加利福尼亚州全州综合交通记录系统提供了摩托车致命伤和非致命伤的数据。采用自回归积分移动平均(ARIMA)回归分析,估算经通胀调整后的每加仑汽油价格对摩托车受伤趋势的影响。
2002年至2011年,加利福尼亚州的摩托车死亡率、重伤率和轻伤率与汽油价格上涨高度相关(相关系数分别为0.76、0.88和0.85)。2008年,伤亡人数达到13457人,自2002年以来增加了34%,在此期间,经通胀调整后的汽油价格每年上涨约0.30美元/加仑。发生事故的摩托车骑手大多为男性(92.5%)、中年(46.2%)和非西班牙裔白人(67.9%)。通过ARIMA模型,我们估计2002年至2011年期间,汽油价格上涨导致加利福尼亚州额外增加了800例死亡和10290例受伤。
我们的研究结果表明,汽油价格上涨导致更多摩托车骑手上路,进而导致更多伤亡。除了强制头盔法及其实施外,其他策略可能包括提高摩托车骑手的风险意识,以及投资公共交通作为摩托车骑行的替代交通方式。此外,应强调普遍规定的培训课程和严格的骑行技能执照测试,以帮助减少摩托车致命伤和非致命伤。