Data-driven reduction targets for a highway safety plan.

Author(s)
Kweon, Y.-J.
Year
Abstract

A safety plan or policy should have traffic safety targets. Setting the targets is challenging but is possible through data-driven approach. This paper describes a study that forecast fatalities and injuries under three scenarios, examined the probabilities of meeting different reduction targets, and proposed realistic targets for Virginia’s safety plan. The study combined statistical forecasting approach, inputs from safety experts, and reported effects of safety improvement measures to come up with ambitious yet achievable targets. Realistic targets for the safety plan in Virginia by 2010 are a 10% reduction in fatalities and a 5% reduction in injuries. These targets assume enactment of a primary safety belt law and deployment of crash countermeasures comparable to 20–30% engineering treatments. (Author/publisher)

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Publication

Library number
C 49683 [electronic version only] /80 / ITRD E145908
Source

Transport Policy, Vol. 17 (2010), No. 4 (August), p. 230-239, 41 ref.

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.