Safety Impacts of Incident Management at Incident Sites.

Author(s)
Adams, K. Knoop, V.L. Hoogendoorn, S. Stoop, J. & Loon, A. van
Year
Abstract

Incident Management (IM) entails the collection of measured taska aimed at clearing the road as soon as possible after an incident has occurred. The rationale behind IM is to improve the safety of the different risk groups around the incident site, as well as to normalize the traffic stream as quickly as possible. In this paper, the authors investigate the effects ofIM on the safety of different risk groups. To this end, an overview is made of the effects of an incident on safety, by conducting a Delphi. It is concluded that for all risk groups, an incident brings additional safety risks especially in the first stages of an incident. The effects of the individual IM measures were quantified and combined with the results of the Delphi, leading to an overview of the effect of IM combined with the risks of a secondary incident. From this investigation it is concluded that IM has a positive effect on safety of all risk groups, especially in the laterstages of incident handling. In the first stages the risks are relativelyhigh, and the impacts of IM are relatively low. Therefore a gap between the two exists there. This shows that in the first stages of incident handling, there is still room for improvement in the safety of certain risk groups.

Request publication

3 + 1 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.

Publication

Library number
C 47762 (In: C 45019 DVD) /80 / ITRD E853695
Source

In: Compendium of papers DVD 88th Annual Meeting of the Transportation Research Board TRB, Washington, D.C., January 11-15, 2009, 15 p.

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.