Impact of motor vehicle injury in Taiwan using potential productive years of life lost.

Author(s)
MacKinney, T. & Baker, T.
Year
Abstract

Motor vehicle injuries are a major harmful side effect of industrialization. This relationship was examined in a rapidly industirializing country, Taiwan, using Potential Productive Years of Life Lost (PPYLL) analysis, and suggestions are made to ways that the injury toll of industrialization might be mitigated. Taiwan is compared to the US, Hungary, Korea, and Chile. Taiwan has a higher PPYLL per 100,000 population due to motor vehicle injury than cardiac disease, cancer or strokes. Twenty-five years ago, more PPYLL was due to cancer, strokes, cardiac disease, and tuberculosis than to motor vehicle injuries. Taiwan's PPYLL rate is much greater than three other industrializing countries - Chile, Korea, and Hungary - and twice that of the US. Explanations for the dramatic rise in motor vehicle injury deaths in Taiwan may be high use of motorcycles, lack of motorcycle helmets, increase in alcohol use, high density, and road and vehicle safety design problems.

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Publication

Library number
960227 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Asia Pacific Journal of Public Health, Vol. 7 (1994), No. 1, p. 10-15, 30 ref.

Our collection

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