Road traffic injury prevention : WHO report advocates input from public health and a systems approach.

Author(s)
Pless, B.
Year
Abstract

“A 63-year-old woman was in critical condition last night after being struck by a car . . . as she crossed Sherbrooke St E shortly after 4 pm . . . It appears the pedestrian and motorist both had a green light, said Constable Lapointe. The driver was turning left when she struck the pedestrian. Police did not believe alcohol or excessive speed were factors in the accident.” Take this all too common news item and multiply by some large number and you have the daily world total of pedestrian injuries or deaths. Add to this car occupants and bicyclists and you reach the grand total of road traffic deaths, which accounts for 20% of all injury deaths. Now, after years of preoccupation with other issues, the World Health Organisation (with the World Bank) has turned its attention to what is arguably the largest and most preventable of all modern epidemics — road crashes. It matters greatly that the WHO has produced a report on road traffic injury prevention, particularly applicable to those in low income countries. However hamstrung the WHO may be by its need to be politically sensitive, it has enormous influence and can legitimise the issue of injury from road crashes as few other bodies can. (Author/publisher)

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Publication

Library number
C 28853 [electronic version only]
Source

British Medical Journal, Vol. 328 (2004), No. 7444 (April 10), p. 846, 6 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.