Lancet Public Health. 2020 Feb;5(2):e86-e98. doi: 10.1016/S2468-2667(19)30246-4. Epub 2019 Dec 23.
A systematic understanding of population-level trends in deaths due to road injuries at the subnational level over time for India's 1·4 billion people, by age, sex, and type of road user is not readily available; we aimed to fill this knowledge gap.
As part of the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study, we estimated the rate of deaths due to road injuries in each state of India from 1990 to 2017 based on several verbal autopsy data sources. We calculated the number of deaths and death rate for road injuries by type of road user, and assessed the age and sex distribution of these deaths over time. Based on the trends of the age-standardised death rate from 1990 to 2017, we projected the age-standardised death rate to 2030 to assess if the states of India would meet the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) target to halve the death rate for road injuries from 2015 by 2020 or 2030. We calculated 95% uncertainty intervals (UIs) for the point estimates.
In 2017, 218 876 deaths (95% UI 201 734 to 231 141) due to road injuries occurred in India, with an age-standardised death rate for road injuries of 17·2 deaths (15·7 to 18·1) per 100 000 population, which was much higher in males (25·7 deaths [23·5 to 27·4] per 100 000) than in females (8·5 deaths [7·2 to 9·1] per 100 000). The number of deaths due to road injuries in India increased by 58·7% (43·6 to 74·7) from 1990 to 2017, but the age-standardised death rate decreased slightly, by 9·2% (0·6 to 18·3). In 2017, pedestrians accounted for 76 729 (35·1%) of all deaths due to road injuries, motorcyclists accounted for 67 524 (30·9%), motor vehicle occupants accounted for 57 802 (26·4%), and cyclists accounted for 15 324 (7·0%). India had a higher age-standardised death rate for road injury among motorcyclists (4·9 deaths [3·9-5·4] per 100 000 population) and cyclists (1·2 deaths [0·9-1·4] per 100 000 population) than the global average. Road injury was the leading cause of death in males aged 15 to 39 years in India in 2017, and the second leading cause in this age group for both sexes combined. The overall age-standardised death rate for road injuries varied by up to 2·6 times between states in 2017. Wide variations were seen between the states in the percentage change in age-standardised death rate for road injuries from 1990 to 2017, ranging from a reduction of 38·2% (22·3 to 51·7) in Delhi to an increase of 17·0% (0·6 to 34·7) in Odisha. If the trends estimated up to 2017 were to continue, no state in India or India overall would achieve the SDG 2020 target in 2020 or even in 2030.
India's contribution to the global number of deaths due to road injuries is increasing, and the country is unlikely to meet the SDG targets if the trends up to 2017 continue. India needs to implement evidence-based road safety interventions, promote strong policies and traffic law enforcement, have better road and vehicle design, and improve care for road injuries at the state level to meet the SDG goal.
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and Indian Council of Medical Research, Department of Health Research, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Government of India.
在印度,14 亿人口中,各年龄段、性别和道路交通参与者类型的道路伤害死亡人数在国家以下各级别的长期变化情况,尚未有系统性的了解。我们旨在填补这一知识空白。
作为全球疾病、伤害和危险因素研究的一部分,我们根据多项死因推断数据来源,估算了印度各邦从 1990 年到 2017 年的道路伤害死亡人数。我们计算了每一种道路交通参与者类型的死亡人数和死亡率,并评估了这些死亡人数随时间的变化情况。根据 1990 年至 2017 年年龄标准化死亡率的变化趋势,我们预测了 2030 年的年龄标准化死亡率,以评估印度各邦是否能够实现可持续发展目标(SDG),即在 2020 年或 2030 年将道路伤害死亡率减半的目标。我们计算了点估计的 95%置信区间(UI)。
2017 年,印度有 218876 人(95% UI 201734-231141)死于道路伤害,道路伤害的年龄标准化死亡率为每 10 万人 17.2 人(15.7-18.1),男性(每 10 万人 25.7 人[23.5-27.4])远高于女性(每 10 万人 8.5 人[7.2-9.1])。印度的道路伤害死亡人数从 1990 年的 436749 人增加到 2017 年的 747436 人,增加了 58.7%(43.6-74.7),但年龄标准化死亡率略有下降,下降了 9.2%(0.6-18.3)。2017 年,行人(76729 人,占 35.1%)是印度道路伤害死亡人数最多的人群,其次是摩托车手(67524 人,占 30.9%)、汽车乘客(57802 人,占 26.4%)和骑自行车的人(15324 人,占 7.0%)。印度的摩托车手(每 10 万人 4.9 人[3.9-5.4])和骑自行车的人(每 10 万人 1.2 人[0.9-1.4])的年龄标准化死亡率均高于全球平均水平。道路伤害是印度 2017 年 15 至 39 岁男性的主要死因,也是该年龄段男女的第二大死因。2017 年,印度各邦的道路伤害死亡率相差最高可达 2.6 倍。各邦道路伤害死亡率的变化趋势也有很大差异,从德里减少 38.2%(22.3-51.7)到奥里萨邦增加 17.0%(0.6-34.7)。如果按照截至 2017 年的趋势继续下去,印度没有任何邦或印度整体能够实现 2020 年的 SDG 目标,甚至到 2030 年也无法实现。
印度在全球道路伤害死亡人数中的占比不断增加,如果按照截至 2017 年的趋势继续下去,印度不太可能实现可持续发展目标。印度需要实施基于证据的道路安全干预措施,加强政策和交通执法力度,改善道路和车辆设计,并在邦一级提高对道路伤害的护理水平,以实现可持续发展目标。
比尔及梅琳达·盖茨基金会和印度医学研究理事会,印度卫生部家庭福利部,印度政府。