University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand; Ministry of Transport, Wellington, New Zealand.
Ministry of Transport, Wellington, New Zealand.
J Safety Res. 2020 Feb;72:67-74. doi: 10.1016/j.jsr.2019.11.003. Epub 2019 Dec 31.
Recent increases in road crashes have reversed New Zealand's formerly declining crash rates to produce annual fatal and serious injury counts that are 49% higher than the lowest rates achieved in 2013.
We model twenty-one factors in fatal and serious injury crashes, four years before and after 2013 using logistic regression. Three major factors are significantly different in the period after 2013, when crash rates increased: (1) alcohol as a cause, (2) learner licence holders, and (3) a regional effect for Auckland. Newly defined speed zones are a more common setting for crashes in the period of upturn but there is no coinciding elevated likelihood of 'speed as a causal factor'. Three factors related to road safety were less common: aged under 25-years old, fatigue, and not wearing a seatbelt.
Results are compared to rates of prosecutions for alcohol-related driving offences over this period. It is possible that New Zealand's successful road safety initiatives of the past have been undermined by reduced levels of enforcement and an unexpected outcome from the graduated driving licence system.
近年来,道路交通事故的增加导致新西兰曾经下降的事故率出现逆转,每年的致命和重伤人数比 2013 年达到的最低水平高出 49%。
我们使用逻辑回归模型对 2013 年前后四年的 21 个致命和重伤事故因素进行了建模。在事故率上升的 2013 年后,有三个主要因素发生了显著变化:(1)酒精是导致事故的原因,(2)学习驾照持有者,以及(3)奥克兰地区的影响。在上升期,新定义的限速区更常见于事故发生地点,但并没有与之相匹配的“速度是导致事故的一个因素”的可能性增加。与道路安全相关的三个因素不太常见:年龄在 25 岁以下、疲劳和不系安全带。
将这些结果与同期因酒后驾车而被起诉的比率进行了比较。过去新西兰成功的道路安全措施可能因执法力度的减弱和驾照分级制度的意外结果而受到破坏。