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| Road Safety - Agenda for Action |
News papers in every metro city in
India give a daily report of people killed and injured in traffic
accidents. As a response to this heightened awareness NGOs have
come up in many cities to deal with this increasing urban epidemic
of death and destruction. Police departments also hold road safety
weeks, painting competitions, zero tolerance drives and demand greater
powers to fine and punish. This has gone on for the last two decades.
But, the killing and the maiming continues unabated.
This is not surprising. International
experience in controlling road accidents shows that the policies
and methods promoted in our cities have not been successful anywhere
else either. The first successes in reducing road traffic accidents
were reported in western Europe and the USA in the early seventies.
From the nineteen thirties to the nineteen fifties they exhorted
people to improve their behaviour, school education programmes and
publicity programmes were promoted. Fines and punishments for traffic
violations made more stringent and enforcement "drives" launched
with great fanfare. But the fatality graph kept rising.
In the sixties some path breaking
studies were published. The basic conclusion of these studies from
United States, Europe and Australia was that virtually all approaches
based solely on education and/or persuasion are ineffective. They
found that the biggest mistake in the developed world during the
first half of the century was a complacent reliance on completely
ineffective educational approaches and targeting of safety drives
on issues which were not associated with accident causation. They
instead suggested that it was important to analyse accident data
in detail, find out the most common factors associated with the
majority of accidents, assess what changes can be made easily in
the short term to roads, vehicles and laws, plan changes for the
long term, focus on violations which result in accidents, and not
expect behaviour change without changing designs and police enforcement
policies. This approach has resulted in a continuous decrease in
accident rates in those countries in the past twenty five years.
In contrast, I don't now of many studies
done in any city of India in which road accident data have been
analysed according to scientific norms in vogue around the world.
Not a single city in India has a well formulated scientific process
through which data gets analysed according to methods which are
likely to be beneficial. To the best of my knowledge, no police
department in India has a collaboration with road safety experts
on a continuing basis.
So, how do we start? First of all,
we should select practical measures which are known to work in all
situations and apply them locally. Second, we need to set up systems
for collection and analysis of road accident data on a scientific
basis suited for our socio-economic conditions. Then, these data
can be used to fine tune policies and set up long term safety programmes.
Examples of policies which work internationally
are, compulsory use of helmets and headlights by two-wheeler riders,
making small vehicles like bicycles and carts more conspicuous by
use of reflectors on all sides and painting them yellow or orange,
use of seatbelts by car occupants, and limiting vehicle speeds below
50 km/h on urban arterial roads. Helmet use is mandated by the Motor
Vehicle Act in India. However, each state has to notify it for it
to be enforced. Most of the states in India have been criminally
negligent in not doing so. Studies done in Delhi, Chennai and Bangalore
show that a vast majority of two-wheeler riders and parents of teenagers
are in favour of the law. The law is very easily enforceable. This
measure alone will reduce deaths by 20-30% among two-wheeler riders.
When two-wheeler riders keep their
headlights on during the day time, it does not help them, but it
makes them more conspicuous for other vehicle drivers. This measure
was found to be effective in Europe almost two decades ago in reducing
fatalities by 10%. Malaysia and Singapore have also introduced this
law. Studies from Malaysia show a 15% reduction in deaths. The measure
does not cost anything and can be implemented tomorrow. Helmet and
daytime headlight use by two-wheelers if enforced throughout the
country may save 4,000 -5,000 lives and 60,000-100,000 serious injuries
annually. If all bicycles in India had reflectors on wheels, in
front and the back, and if all of them were painted yellow or orange,
they would be much more visible. This measure would save another
few thousand lives, would not cost much, and can be implemented
easily.
Fifty percent or more of road deaths
in cities involve pedestrians. A pedestrian hit by a car at 30 km/h
has less than 10% chance of dying, whereas this probability increases
to more than 80% at 50 km/h. This why all European cities are limiting
vehicle speeds to less than 30 km/h in residential and shopping
areas by use of well designed speed breakers, narrowing streets,
and encouraging dead end roads. On arterial roads speeds are limited
to 50 km/h with light controlled pedestrian crossings at frequent
intervals. We are encouraging speeds by provision of flyovers and
increasing distances between traffic lights. This can only result
in increase in accidents. Underground and over ground pedestrian
facilities do not work unless accompanied by escalators and ensuring
safety of women and children.
Seat belt use by car occupants decreases deaths by 20-30%. But no where in the world do a majority of people use seat belts unless the same is made compulsory. However, this measure will help car users only who constitute less than 5 percent of total road deaths in India.
There are a host of other measures which can be applied after we set our priorities on the basis of what our data tell us. It is high time our policy makers and vehicle manufacturers gave more importance to science in road safety rather than PR for road safety.
By: Professor Dinesh Mohan
Date: Not Available
Source: http://www.cybersteering.com/cruise/feature/safety.html
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