Road, casualties and public health - the open sewers of the 21st century? : presentation 12th European Transport Safety Lecture, London, United Kingdom, 23rd November 2010.

Auteur(s)
Dorling, D.
Jaar
Samenvatting

Every century comes with a major public health warning about the harm that we inflict on ourselves. In Britain in the nineteenth century it was the diseases we spread by tolerating open sewers. In the twentieth century it was tobacco that we slowly learnt to love, then fear. In the twenty first century it is the way we tolerate how cars are allowed to travel on our roads. Accidents involving cars are responsible for more deaths among children and young adults in Britain than can be attributed to any other causes. What remains the same over time is our intolerance of suffering, of ourselves and those around us. Slowly, one by one, the causes of the greatest damage to health are progressively removed. This lecture brings together maps, statistics and arguments to suggest that we should now view our road transport system as the greatest current avoidable toll on public health. (Author/publisher)

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Publicatie

Bibliotheeknummer
20131812 ST [electronic version only]
Uitgave

Brussels, European Transport Safety Council ETSC, 2010, 36 p.

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