Abstract
Vehicle-type specific injury severity has rarely been investigated mainly because of a lack of such information in hospital-based studies that normally exclude those who are severely injured and die on the scene. No study has been conducted either on driver characteristics in single vehicle crashes in Taiwan according to vehicle type. This was the first population-based study aiming to describe demographic characteristics in association with vehicle-specific rates of injury and fatality among driver victims involved in single-vehicle crashes in Taiwan. We presented sex and age-specific number and proportion of driver victims according to vehicle type. We calculated sex and age-specific rates of injury and fatality. Injury and fatality rates were also graphically presented. Bicycle and motorcycle rider victims generally had higher injury rates but lower fatality rates. However, older (45+) bicycle rider victims had greater fatality risk. By contrast, truck and car driver victims were generally associated with lower injury rates but with higher fatality rates. Elderly (65+ years) truck driver victims suffered from higher rates of injury and fatality. Male victims were found to have a higher fatality rate than female victims regardless of vehicle type. The vehicle-type-specific analyses of injury and fatality are considered useful in identifying single-vehicle crash victims at greater risks of injury and fatality.
Highlights
The World Health Organization claimed a rise in road traffic deaths of more than 1.35 million in2016
The victim profile records the role of driver, passenger, or pedestrian, date of birth, gender, type of vehicle, with/without injury at the time of crash, dead/alive within 30 days, and personal identification number of each victim involved in the accident
We disclosed the role of vehicle type in association with injury and case-fatality rates among driver victims involved in single-vehicle crashes
Summary
The World Health Organization claimed a rise in road traffic deaths of more than 1.35 million in2016. The World Health Organization claimed a rise in road traffic deaths of more than 1.35 million in. Road traffic is the leading cause of death among younger people aged between 5 and 29 years. Despite these massive and largely preventable losses in human lives and consequent toll, actions to combat this global challenge have been insufficient [1]. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 4687; doi:10.3390/ijerph17134687 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph
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