An overview of the Vehicle Inspectorate's database on bus, coach and goods vehicle examinations following major accidents.

Author(s)
Macdonald, D.
Year
Abstract

The United Kingdom's Department of Transport's Vehicle Inspectorate examines approximately 1,800 accident involved vehicles each year to establish whether vehicle condition contributed to the cause of the accident. The majority of these vehicles are heavy goods vehicles (HGVs), buses and coaches. The information may be used by the Vehicle Inspectorate to investigate vehicle safety defects of a design or manufacturing nature. The information collected from the vehicle examinations is coded and entered onto a computer database. This paper describes how the information is collected, coded and subsequently used to identify vehicle safety concerns or to provide information used in formulating government policy. The strengths and limitations of this method of collecting and analysing this data are described and examples used to illustrate these. Lessons learned about data collection, coding, and accessing of the information are included. Future development of all these areas is described. The move to place greater emphasis on the secondary safety aspects of vehicle examinations is included. (A)

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Publication

Library number
C 2592 (In: C 2572 [electronic version only]) /81 /95 / IRRD 864626
Source

In: Proceedings of the thirteenth International Technical Conference on Experimental Safety Vehicles ESV, Paris, France, 4-7 November, 1991, Volume 1, p. 192-195, 2 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.