The School of Public Policy, University College London, The Rubin Building, 29/31 Tavistock Square, London WC1H 9QU, UK.
Department of Psychology, University of Essex, Colchester, UK.
J Safety Res. 2018 Sep;66:131-140. doi: 10.1016/j.jsr.2018.07.002. Epub 2018 Jul 7.
Concerns have been raised that the nonlinear relation between crashes and travel exposure invalidates the conventional use of crash rates to control for exposure. A new metric of exposure that bears a linear association to crashes was used as basis for calculating unbiased crash risks. This study compared the two methods - conventional crash rates and new adjusted crash risk - for assessing the effect of driver age, gender, and time of day on the risk of crash involvement and crash fatality.
We used police reports of single-car and multi-car crashes with fatal and nonfatal driver injuries that occurred during 2002-2012 in Great Britain.
Conventional crash rates were highest in the youngest age group and declined steeply until age 60-69 years. The adjusted crash risk instead peaked at age 21-29 years and reduced gradually with age. The risk of nighttime driving, especially among teenage drivers, was much smaller when based on adjusted crash risks. Finally, the adjusted fatality risk incurred by elderly drivers remained constant across time of day, suggesting that their risk of sustaining a fatal injury due to a crash is more attributable to excess fragility than to crash seriousness.
Our findings demonstrate a biasing effect of low travel exposure on conventional crash rates. This implies that conventional methods do not yield meaningful comparisons of crash risk between driver groups and driving conditions of varying exposure to risk. The excess crash rates typically associated with teenage and elderly drivers as well as nighttime driving are attributed in part to overestimation of risk at low travel exposure. Practical Applications: Greater attention should be directed toward crash involvement among drivers in their 20s and 30s as well as younger drivers. Countermeasures should focus on the role of physical vulnerability in fatality risk of elderly drivers.
人们担心事故与出行暴露之间的非线性关系使得传统的使用事故率来控制暴露量的方法失去了有效性。一种与事故具有线性关系的新暴露度量标准被用来作为计算无偏事故风险的基础。本研究比较了两种方法——传统的事故率和新的调整后的事故风险——来评估驾驶员年龄、性别和时间对事故发生风险和事故致死率的影响。
我们使用了 2002-2012 年期间在英国发生的涉及致命和非致命驾驶员受伤的单辆和多辆汽车事故的警方报告。
传统的事故率在最年轻的年龄组中最高,并急剧下降至 60-69 岁。而调整后的事故风险则在 21-29 岁时达到峰值,并随着年龄的增长逐渐降低。基于调整后的事故风险,夜间驾驶的风险,尤其是青少年驾驶员的风险,要小得多。最后,老年驾驶员夜间发生事故的致死风险保持不变,这表明他们由于事故而导致严重伤害的风险更多归因于过度脆弱,而不是事故的严重程度。
我们的研究结果表明,低出行暴露对传统事故率存在偏差影响。这意味着传统方法不能在不同暴露风险的驾驶员群体和驾驶条件之间对事故风险进行有意义的比较。通常与青少年和老年驾驶员以及夜间驾驶相关的额外事故率部分归因于低出行暴露时风险的高估。
应更加关注 20 多岁和 30 多岁的驾驶员以及年轻驾驶员的事故发生情况。对策应侧重于身体脆弱性在老年驾驶员的致死风险中的作用。