Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
573777 | Accident Analysis & Prevention | 2008 | 11 Pages |
This paper identifies nine characteristics of road safety problems that are all in principle amenable to numerical measurement. The nine characteristics identified are:1.Magnitude2.Severity3.Externality4.Inequity5.Complexity6.Spatial dispersion7.Temporal stability8.Perceived urgency9.Amenability to treatmentThe purpose of identifying these dimensions and of trying to measure them is to provide a basis for selecting problems for treatment by means of safety programmes. Selecting problems for treatment usually cannot be done on the basis of a single dimension, as it is the mix of characteristics that determine the prospects for successfully treating a problem. It is proposed that amenability to treatment is a function of complexity, perceived urgency and the availability of cost-effective treatments. Speed and speeding is used as an example of a road safety problem to illustrate how the various dimensions can be measured.