Professor, Department of Civil Engineering, College of Engineering, University of Bahrain, Bahrain.
Accid Anal Prev. 2018 Feb;111:297-310. doi: 10.1016/j.aap.2017.11.035. Epub 2017 Dec 16.
The global road crash deaths during the past 35 years are estimated and analysed considering micro-level data for 215 countries. The data were gathered from Governmental records, international databases, and personal contacts. The data are adjusted for underreporting, death definition differences and missing data. The study models both reported and adjusted death to forecast future crash trends for each continent. The developed models employed curve fitting regression technique. It took over five years to build-up the database. The global sum of crash deaths showed firm increasing trends between 1980 and 2008. Subsequently, the global deaths tend to slow down. The adjusted death during 2014 ranged between 792,000 and 905,000. The high range showed 40% lesser death than World Health Organization (WHO) estimate. The developed models presented a plateauing transition stage of global road deaths before descending. This is contradicting WHO and The World Bank (TWB) forecasts. The global adjusted death for 2020 and 2030, differed substantially from WHO and TWB forecasts. The results showed inconsistencies in road deaths between various WHO sectors. The trend of crash fatalities in Asia followed closely with that for global trend, and that in Africa it showed fluctuated trend with steep increasing tendency after 1999. In South America, it showed continuous ascending trends, and that in Europe and Oceanic countries showed clear descending patterns. The trend in North and Central America did not change much during the period between 1980 and 2007. While the developed models indicated drops of 33% in North and Central America, 18% in Oceania and 13% in Asia by 2025 compared with 2014, they increase by over 44% in Africa and 32% in South America. The poor safety records in several continents, require careful reading, proper interpretation of the results and extensive research.
在过去的 35 年中,全球道路死亡人数估计和分析考虑微观层面的数据为 215 个国家。数据来自政府记录、国际数据库和个人联系。数据进行了调整,以弥补漏报、死亡定义差异和数据缺失。该研究对报告和调整后的死亡数据进行建模,以预测每个大陆的未来碰撞趋势。所开发的模型采用曲线拟合回归技术。建立数据库花了五年多的时间。全球碰撞死亡人数从 1980 年到 2008 年呈稳步上升趋势。随后,全球死亡人数趋于放缓。2014 年调整后的死亡人数在 792,000 至 905,000 之间。高范围比世界卫生组织(WHO)的估计减少了 40%。所开发的模型呈现出全球道路死亡人数下降之前的平稳过渡阶段,这与 WHO 和世界银行(TWB)的预测相矛盾。2020 年和 2030 年全球调整后的死亡人数与 WHO 和 TWB 的预测有很大出入。结果表明,不同 WHO 部门之间的道路死亡人数存在不一致。亚洲的碰撞死亡人数趋势与全球趋势密切相关,非洲的趋势则在 1999 年后呈波动趋势,呈急剧上升趋势。在南美洲,它呈现出连续上升的趋势,而在欧洲和大洋洲国家,它呈现出明显下降的模式。1980 年至 2007 年期间,中北美洲的趋势变化不大。虽然所开发的模型表明,到 2025 年,与 2014 年相比,北美和中美洲下降 33%,大洋洲下降 18%,亚洲下降 13%,但非洲增加超过 44%,南美洲增加 32%。几个大陆的安全记录不佳,需要仔细阅读、正确解释结果和广泛研究。