确定马来西亚涉及儿童的摩托车致命和严重伤害碰撞的影响因素。

Jennifer Oxley, Mano Deepa Ravi, Jeremy Yuen, Effie Hoareau, Hizal Hanis Hashim
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在马来西亚,摩托车碰撞约占所有道路创伤的60%,其中很大一部分涉及16岁及以下的儿童。然而,我们对造成车祸的因素以及在摩托车车祸中死亡和严重受伤的儿童的伤害模式的了解还存在许多空白。这项研究的目的是检查致命和严重伤害摩托车相关的碰撞,以确定在儿童摩托车手中造成伤害的因素和模式。从国家警察报告的碰撞数据库(M-ROADS)中提取2007年至2011年(含)期间所有已确定的摩托车致命碰撞,并选择一系列变量进行检查。总共有17,677起事故中有骑手或坐垫死亡,其中2,038起涉及儿童,相当于12%。对涉及儿童的撞车事故的调查显示,一些撞车事故涉及两个以上的儿童骑摩托车,因此,总的来说,儿童占致命碰撞的9.5%,占严重伤害碰撞的18.4%。儿童致命或严重伤害碰撞中,儿童作为骑手的比例很高(62%),这在10至16岁的儿童中最为常见。大多数碰撞发生在农村道路,在50-70公里/小时的限速区域,大约三分之一发生在十字路口。涉及另一辆摩托车或乘用车的碰撞分别占死亡人数和重伤人数的41%和53%。儿童(25.5%和18.8%)头部受伤的比例很高(43.9%),其中10-16岁年龄组占37.7%。此外,52.4%的头部受伤儿童没有戴头盔。讨论了这些发现对安全系统框架内的对策的影响,特别是旨在降低无证骑行和头盔佩戴率的干预措施,以及基础设施对策。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Identifying contributing factors to fatal and serious injury motorcycle collisions involving children in Malaysia.

In Malaysia, motorcycle crashes constitute approximately 60 percent of all road trauma, and a substantial proportion involve children 16 years and younger. There are, however, many gaps in our knowledge on contributing factors to crashes and injury patterns amongst children killed and seriously injured in motorcycle crashes. The aim of this study was to examine fatal and serious injury motorcycle-related collisions to identify contributing factors and injury patterns amongst child motorcyclists. All identified motorcyclist fatal crashes between 2007 and 2011 (inclusive) were extracted from the national Police-reported crash database (M-ROADS) and a range of variables were selected for examination. A total of 17,677 crashes were extracted where a rider or pillion was killed and of these crashes 2,038 involved children, equating to 12 percent. Examination of crashes involving children revealed that some crashes involved more than two children on the motorcycle, therefore, overall children constituted 9.5% of fatal and 18.4% of serious injury collisions. A high proportion of child fatal or serious injury collisions involved the child as the rider (62%), and this was most common for children aged between 10 and 16 years. The majority of collisions occurred on rural roads, in speed limit zones of 50-70km/h, and approximately one-third occurred at an intersection. Collisions involving another motorcycle or a passenger vehicle contributed to 41% and 53% of the total fatalities and severe injuries, respectively. A high proportion (43.9%) of the children (25.5% riders and 18.8% pillion) sustained head injuries with 37.7% being in the 10-16 age group. Furthermore, 52.4% of the children sustaining head injuries did not wear a helmet. The implications of these findings for countermeasures within a Safe System framework, particularly interventions aimed at reducing the rate of unlicensed riding and helmet wearing, and infrastructure countermeasures are discussed.

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