Logo image
Traffic Fatalities and Injuries: The Effect of Changes in Infrastructure and Other Trends
Accepted manuscript   Open access   Peer reviewed

Traffic Fatalities and Injuries: The Effect of Changes in Infrastructure and Other Trends

Robert B. Noland
Accident Analysis & Prevention, Vol.35(4), pp.599-611
2003
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.7282/T3736T9J

Abstract

Transport safety Seat-belt usage Infrastructure Engineering Design Medical Technology
An analysis of how various road infrastructure improvements affect traffic-related fatalities and injuries is conducted while controlling for other factors known to affect overall safety. The road infrastructure elements analysed include total lane miles, the fraction of lane miles in different road categories (interstates, arterial, and collector roads), the average number of lanes for each road category, and lane widths for arterials and collector roads. Other variables that are controlled for in the study include total population, population age cohorts, per capita income, per capita alcohol consumption, seat-belt legislation (and seat-belt usage), and a proxy variable that represents underlying changes in medical technology. The data used is a cross-sectional time series database of U.S. states and is analysed using a fixed effects negative binomial regression that accounts for heterogeneity in the data. Data from all 50 states over 14 years is used. Results strongly refute the hypothesis that infrastructure improvements have been effective at reducing total fatalities and injuries. While controlling for other effects it is found that demographic changes in age cohorts, increased seat-belt use, reduced alcohol consumption and increases in medical technology have accounted for a large share of overall reductions in fatalities.
pdf
Noland 82006 original - supplementary1-1-00082005320.46 kBDownloadView
Accepted Manuscript (AM) Open Access
url
http://doi.org/10.1016/S0001-4575(02)00040-4View
Version of Record (VoR) Accident Analysis & Prevention
url
Report an accessibility issueView
Please complete a content remediation request to report an accessibility issue with a library electronic resource, website, or service.

Metrics

567 File downloads
222 Record Views

Details

Logo image