Evaluating and improving fleet safety in Australia.

Author(s)
Murray, W. Newnam, S. Watson, B. Davey, J. & Schonfeld, C.
Year
Abstract

This project has reviewed developments in fleet and work-related road safety in Australia, particularly the following areas. • The extent of the problem. • Examples of best practice. • Mechanisms for evaluation. • Theoretical paradigms and future directions. From this, the report achieves the following aims. 1. Identifies a range of societal, business, legal, and cost reasons to focus on fleet safety at the macro and micro levels. 2. Describes a wide range of government, insurer, and occupational health and safety (OHS)-led case studies. 3. Develops an approach to fleet safety evaluation based on a range of proactive and reactive, or lead and lag key performance indicators (KPIs) on crash rates, costs, and qualitative process issues. 4. Identifies an apparent lack of fleet safety theory, and then describes several more general safety theories and frameworks, including the Surveillance Model, the Haddon Matrix and Organisational Culture-based approaches. 5. Synthesises the above to develop a best practice process model for fleet safety and recommend future work. (Author/publisher)

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Publication

Library number
C 33273 [electronic version only]
Source

Civic Square, ACT, Australian Transport Safety Bureau ATSB, 2003, VIII + 129 p., 150 ref.; Road Safety Research Grant Report

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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.