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Road traffic injuries in Mozambique. 莫桑比克的道路交通伤害。
Pub Date : 2003-03-01 DOI: 10.1076/icsp.10.1.63.14112
Francelina Romão, Hanifa Nizamo, Domingos Mapasse, Momede Mussá Rafico, João José, Simão Mataruca, M Lúcia Efron, Lucas O Omondi, Thelma Leifert, Joaquim M L Marungo Bicho

Road traffic injuries affect the economy, health and quality of life of the people of Mozambique. Current road safety programmes are inadequate and inefficient given the magnitude of the problem. Data reported on road traffic crashes in the period 1990 to 2000 from the National Institute for Road Safety, the traffic police and the Central Hospital of Maputo were reviewed. The burden of road traffic injuries in Mozambique is rising, with at least three people killed daily. The age group most affected is 25-38 (39.35%), followed by 16-24 (20.79%). The main causes of crashes include reckless driving, drunken driving, roads with potholes, inadequate signs, lack of protection for pedestrians, and inadequate traffic law enforcement. However, the data are not adequate to reveal the true magnitude of the problem. Data collected by different sources are incomplete and not coordinated with other sources and databases. In urban areas, however, better response to crashes, treatment of the injured, reporting and data collection is attributable to a greater concentration of police and medical facilities. Road traffic safety programmes in Mozambique are inadequate and inefficient, starting with the data collection system. Improvement of injury surveillance systems is needed to help make road traffic safety a national development agenda priority and for developing and implementing road safety policies. For road safety programmes to be effective, government must facilitate stakeholders' involvement, and the clear definition of government activities, civil society activities and public-private partnerships need to be established.

道路交通伤害影响莫桑比克人民的经济、健康和生活质量。鉴于问题的严重性,目前的道路安全规划是不充分和低效的。审查了1990年至2000年期间国家道路安全研究所、交通警察和马普托中央医院所报告的道路交通事故数据。莫桑比克的道路交通伤害负担正在上升,每天至少有三人死亡。25-38岁是影响最大的年龄组(39.35%),其次是16-24岁(20.79%)。造成交通事故的主要原因包括鲁莽驾驶、酒后驾驶、道路坑洼、标志不到位、对行人缺乏保护以及交通执法不力。然而,这些数据不足以揭示问题的真正严重程度。不同来源收集的数据不完整,与其他来源和数据库不协调。然而,在城市地区,由于警察和医疗设施更加集中,对事故的反应、伤员的治疗、报告和数据收集都有所改善。莫桑比克的道路交通安全规划不足,效率低下,首先是数据收集系统。需要改进伤害监测系统,以帮助将道路交通安全作为国家发展议程的优先事项,并有助于制定和执行道路安全政策。为了使道路安全规划有效,政府必须促进利益攸关方的参与,并且需要建立政府活动、民间社会活动和公私伙伴关系的明确定义。
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引用次数: 54
Speed control in developing countries: issues, challenges and opportunities in reducing road traffic injuries. 发展中国家的速度控制:减少道路交通伤害的问题、挑战和机遇。
Pub Date : 2003-03-01 DOI: 10.1076/icsp.10.1.77.14113
Francis K Afukaar

Speed has been determined to be one of the most common contributing factors in vehicle crashes. This study explores vehicle speed as a factor in the causation of road traffic crashes, using the example of Ghana. It examines the effectiveness of various speed control measures, based on police-reported traffic crashes in Ghana and published works on speed control measures in both industrialized and developing countries. In Ghana, pedestrians were the main victims of road traffic injuries. The dominant driver error assigned by traffic police was loss of control, with the underlying factor being excessive vehicle speeds. The 'speed factor' alone accounted for more than 50% of all Ghanaian road traffic crashes between 1998 and 2000. While the enforcement of speed limits by traffic police may not be affordable for most developing countries, rumble strips and speed humps were found to be effective on Ghanaian roads. Rumble strips installed on the main Accra-Kumasi highway reduced crashes by about 35% and fatalities by about 55%. Reducing vehicle speeds may be one of the most effective interventions to stem traffic crashes in low-income countries. However, setting lower speed limits is not an effective intervention without the traffic law enforcement resources to ensure that limits are followed. Developing countries must also look to other speed reduction measures such as speed bumps and rumble strips, roads that segregate high- and low-speed users, and technological solutions such as speed governors, as well as greater public awareness of the problem.

速度已被确定为造成车辆碰撞的最常见因素之一。本研究以加纳为例,探讨了车速作为导致道路交通事故的一个因素。它根据加纳警方报告的交通事故以及工业化国家和发展中国家关于速度控制措施的出版著作,审查了各种速度控制措施的有效性。在加纳,行人是道路交通伤害的主要受害者。交警认为司机的主要失误是失控,潜在因素是车速过快。1998年至2000年间,仅“速度因素”就占了加纳所有道路交通事故的50%以上。虽然大多数发展中国家的交通警察可能负担不起执行速度限制的费用,但在加纳的道路上发现隆隆带和减速带是有效的。在阿克拉-库马西主干道上安装的隆隆声带减少了约35%的撞车事故和约55%的死亡人数。降低车速可能是低收入国家遏止交通事故最有效的干预措施之一。然而,如果没有交通执法部门的资源来确保限速得到遵守,设定较低的限速并不是一种有效的干预。发展中国家还必须考虑其他减速措施,如减速带和减速带、分隔高速和低速使用者的道路、调速器等技术解决方案,以及提高公众对这一问题的认识。
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引用次数: 171
The global challenge of road traffic injuries. Foreword. 道路交通伤害的全球挑战。前言。
Pub Date : 2003-03-01 DOI: 10.1076/icsp.10.1.1.14111
Mark L Rosenberg, Wim Rogmans
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引用次数: 2
Injury surveillance. 伤害监测。
Pub Date : 2003-03-01 DOI: 10.1076/icsp.10.1.105.14118
Kara McGee, Margie Peden, Rick Waxweiler, David Sleet
Mortality data from 2000 indicate that approximately 5.1 million people die annually as a result of some form of injury. This number is small compared with the number of survivors of injuries, many of whom suffer life-long health consequences. Traffic injuries comprise 25% of all injury fatalities. Globally, each year more than 20 million people are injured or disabled and more than one million are killed due to road traffic crashes alone. Developing countries account for more than 85% of all fatalities and more than 90% of disability adjusted life years lost due to road traffic crashes. While information systems to monitor fatal and non-fatal injuries exist in many developed countries, little is known about the extent of these injuries in developing countries. Adequate data about types of injuries and their causes is vital to understanding the global injury problem. Injury surveillance is a crucial first step for reducing the burden of injury worldwide and is especially necessary to accurately characterise the magnitude of the road traffic injury problem in lowand middle-income countries. To address the need for improved injury surveillance, the World Health Organization (WHO) and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), in collaboration with experts from around the globe, have published a manual entitled Injury Surveillance Guidelines. This manual will help readers design, establish and maintain injury surveillance systems that fit the unique needs and circumstances of their own settings and also satisfy the needs of others for data that can be aggregated and compared. The guidelines are designed to be particularly useful in settings where there may be severe constraints on the capacity to develop and sustain an injury surveillance system. Road traffic injuries is one of the areas where the need for quality surveillance systems is the greatest. The guidelines
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引用次数: 1
Afterword: speaking for the victims. 后记:为受害者说话。
Pub Date : 2003-03-01 DOI: 10.1076/icsp.10.1.119.14102
Rochelle Sobel
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引用次数: 0
Road traffic crashes: operationalizing equity in the context of health sector reform. 道路交通事故:在卫生部门改革背景下实现公平。
Pub Date : 2003-03-01 DOI: 10.1076/icsp.10.1.11.14117
Tim Evans, Hilary Brown
Because of the increased incidence of road traffic crashes in developing countries and their preventable nature, they are beginning to be recognized as a public health problem. The difference in road traffic crashes between developed and developing countries is well understood: approximately 85% of all traffic deaths take place in low and middle income countries. The paper explains the acronym PROGRESS that stands for place of residence, religion, occupation, gender, race/ethnicity, education, socioeconomic status and social networks and capital. That comprehensive list highlights the multidimensionality of the distribution of health among population subgroups. The increasing incidence of road traffic crashes in developing countries and the emerging public health constituency that is seen mobilizing around road safety provides an opportune moment to operationalize equity in the context of health sector reform.
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引用次数: 177
Traffic-related injury prevention interventions for low-income countries. 低收入国家交通伤害预防干预措施。
Pub Date : 2003-03-01 DOI: 10.1076/icsp.10.1.109.14115
Samuel N Forjuoh

Traffic-related injuries have become a major public health concern worldwide. However, unlike developed or high-income countries (HICs), many developing or low-income countries (LICs) have made very little progress towards addressing this problem. Lack of the progress in LICs is attributable, in part, to their economic situation in terms of their governments' lack of resources to invest in traffic safety, cultural beliefs regarding the fatalism of injuries, competing health problems particularly with the emergence of HIV/AIDS, distinctive traffic mixes comprising a substantial number of vulnerable road users for whom less research has been done, low literacy rates precluding motorists to read and understand road signs, and peculiar political situations occasionally predominated by dictatorship and non-democratic governments. How then can LICs tackle the challenge of traffic safety from the experiences of HICs without reinventing the wheel? This paper reviews selected interventions and strategies that have been developed to counter traffic-related injuries in HICs in terms of their effectiveness and their applicability to LICs. Proven and promising interventions or strategies such as seat belt and helmet use, legislation and enforcement of seat belt use, sidewalks, roadway barriers, selected traffic-calming designs (e.g., speed ramps/bumps), pedestrian crossing signs combined with clearly marked crosswalks, and public education and behavior modification targeted at motorists are all feasible and useable in LICs as evidenced by data from many LICs. While numerous traffic-related injury policy interventions and strategies developed largely in HICs are potentially transferable to LICs, it is important to consider country-specific factors such as costs, feasibility, sustainability, and barriers, all of which must be factored into the assessment of effectiveness in specific LIC settings. Almost all interventions and strategies that have been proven effective in HICs will need to be evaluated in LICs and particular attention paid to the effectiveness of enforcement measures. It behooves LIC governments, however, to ensure that only standard, approved safety devices like helmets are imported into their countries. Additionally, LICs may need to improvise and innovate in the traffic safety technology transfer.

与交通有关的伤害已成为全世界关注的一个主要公共卫生问题。然而,与发达国家或高收入国家(HICs)不同,许多发展中国家或低收入国家(lic)在解决这一问题方面进展甚微。低收入国家缺乏进展的部分原因是其经济状况,包括政府缺乏投资于交通安全的资源、关于伤害是宿命论的文化信仰、特别是随着艾滋病毒/艾滋病的出现而产生的健康问题、独特的交通组合包括大量弱势道路使用者,对他们进行的研究较少、识字率低使驾驶者无法阅读和理解道路标志。以及偶尔由独裁和非民主政府主导的特殊政治局势。那么,低收入国家如何从高收入国家的经验中应对交通安全的挑战,而不必重新发明轮子?本文从其有效性和对低收入国家的适用性方面回顾了为应对高收入国家交通相关伤害而制定的一些干预措施和策略。许多低收入国家的数据证明,安全带和头盔的使用、安全带使用的立法和执法、人行道、道路障碍、选定的交通平静设计(例如,速度坡道/凸起)、人行横道标志与清晰标记的人行横道相结合,以及针对驾车者的公共教育和行为矫正等经过验证和有前景的干预措施或策略,在低收入国家都是可行和可用的。虽然主要在高收入国家制定的许多交通相关伤害政策干预措施和战略有可能转移到低收入国家,但重要的是要考虑到具体国家的具体因素,如成本、可行性、可持续性和障碍,所有这些都必须考虑到具体低收入国家环境的有效性评估。几乎所有在高收入国家证明有效的干预措施和战略都需要在低收入国家进行评估,并特别注意执法措施的有效性。然而,低收入国家政府有责任确保只有标准的、经批准的安全设备(如头盔)才能进口到他们的国家。此外,低收入国家可能需要在交通安全技术转让方面进行即兴发挥和创新。
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引用次数: 212
Strengthening care for injured persons in less developed countries: a case study of Ghana and Mexico. 加强欠发达国家对受伤人员的护理:加纳和墨西哥的个案研究。
Pub Date : 2003-03-01 DOI: 10.1076/icsp.10.1.45.14114
Charles Mock, Carlos Arreola-Risa, Robert Quansah

In all countries, the priority for reducing road traffic injuries should be prevention. Nonetheless, there are low-cost ways to strengthen the care of injured persons, that will help to lower the toll from road traffic. The purpose of this review was to elucidate ways to accomplish this goal in the context of less developed countries. Studies selected for this review were obtained by Medline review, selecting on key words such as trauma, injury, trauma care, essential health services, and developing country. Articles pertaining to any country and all available years were considered. In addition, the authors utilized articles from the gray literature and journals from Mexico and Ghana that are not Medline referenced. Studies surveyed point to road safety and other forms of injury prevention, as well as prehospital care, as likely priorities for developing countries. Nonetheless, hospital-based improvements can contribute to decreases in mortality and, especially, decreases in disability. For both prehospital and hospital based care, studies revealed several critical weak points to address in: (1) human resources (staffing and training); (2) physical resources (equipment, supplies, and infrastructure); and (3) administration and organization. The 'essential services' approach, which has contributed to progress in a variety of fields of international health, needs to be developed for the care of the injured. This would define the trauma treatment services that could realistically be made available to virtually every injured person. It would then address the inputs of human resources, physical resources, and administration necessary to assure these services optimally in the different geographic and socioeconomic environments worldwide. Finally, it would identify and target deficiencies in these inputs that need to be strengthened.

在所有国家,减少道路交通伤害的优先事项应该是预防。然而,有一些低成本的方法可以加强对受伤人员的护理,这将有助于降低道路交通造成的伤亡。这次审查的目的是阐明在欠发达国家的情况下实现这一目标的方法。本综述选取的研究通过Medline综述获得,选取的关键词包括创伤、损伤、创伤护理、基本卫生服务和发展中国家。审议了关于任何国家和所有可用年份的条款。此外,作者还利用了灰色文献和来自墨西哥和加纳的期刊中的文章,这些文章没有被Medline引用。接受调查的研究指出,道路安全和其他形式的伤害预防以及院前护理可能是发展中国家的优先事项。尽管如此,以医院为基础的改善有助于降低死亡率,特别是降低残疾率。对于院前和医院护理,研究揭示了需要解决的几个关键薄弱环节:(1)人力资源(人员配备和培训);(2)实物资源(设备、物资和基础设施);(三)管理和组织。"基本服务"的做法促进了国际卫生各个领域的进展,需要为伤员的护理制定这种做法。这将定义创伤治疗服务,实际上可以提供给几乎每一个受伤的人。然后,它将解决人力资源、物质资源和必要的管理投入,以确保这些服务在全球不同的地理和社会经济环境中达到最佳状态。最后,它将查明和针对这些投入中需要加强的不足之处。
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引用次数: 121
Road traffic injuries in Kenya: magnitude, causes and status of intervention. 肯尼亚的道路交通伤害:规模、原因和干预状况。
Pub Date : 2003-03-01 DOI: 10.1076/icsp.10.1.53.14103
Wilson Odero, Meleckidzedeck Khayesi, P M Heda

Road traffic crashes exert a huge burden on Kenya's economy and health care services. Current interventions are sporadic, uncoordinated and ineffective. This report offers a descriptive analysis of secondary data obtained from a variety of published literature and unpublished reports. Over three thousand people are killed annually on Kenyan roads. A four-fold increase in road fatalities has been experienced over the last 30 years. More than 75% of road traffic casualties are economically productive young adults. Pedestrians and passengers are the most vulnerable; they account for 80% of the deaths. Buses and matatus are the vehicles most frequently involved in fatal crashes. Characteristics of crashes vary considerably between urban and rural settings: pedestrians are more likely to be killed in urban areas, whereas passengers are the majority killed on intercity highways that transverse rural settings. Road safety interventions have not made any measurable impact in reducing the numbers, rates and consequences of road crashes. Despite the marked increase in road crashes in Kenya, little effort has been made to develop and implement effective interventions. Impediments to road traffic injury prevention and control include ineffective coordination, inadequate resources and qualified personnel, and limited capacity to implement and monitor interventions. There is need to improve the collection and availability of accurate data to help in recognising traffic injury as a priority public health problem, raising awareness of policymakers on existing effective countermeasures and mobilizing resources for implementation. Establishment of an effective lead agency and development of stakeholder coalitions to address the problem are desirable.

道路交通事故给肯尼亚的经济和保健服务造成了巨大负担。目前的干预措施是零星的、不协调的和无效的。本报告提供了从各种已发表的文献和未发表的报告中获得的次要数据的描述性分析。每年有超过3000人死于肯尼亚的道路交通事故。在过去30年中,道路死亡人数增加了四倍。75%以上的道路交通伤亡是具有经济生产力的年轻人。行人和乘客是最脆弱的;他们占死亡人数的80%。公共汽车和matatus是最常发生致命车祸的车辆。城市和农村交通事故的特点差别很大:行人在城市地区更容易死亡,而乘客在横穿农村地区的城际高速公路上死亡的人数最多。道路安全干预措施在减少道路交通事故的数量、发生率和后果方面没有产生任何可衡量的影响。尽管肯尼亚的道路交通事故明显增加,但在制定和实施有效干预措施方面几乎没有作出任何努力。预防和控制道路交通伤害的障碍包括协调不力、资源和合格人员不足以及实施和监测干预措施的能力有限。需要改进准确数据的收集和提供,以帮助认识到交通伤害是一个优先的公共卫生问题,提高决策者对现有有效对策的认识,并为实施工作调动资源。建立一个有效的领导机构和发展利益攸关方联盟来解决这一问题是可取的。
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引用次数: 279
Non-fatal violence-related injuries in Kingston, Jamaica: a preventable drain on resources. 牙买加金斯敦的非致命暴力伤害:可预防的资源消耗。
Pub Date : 2002-12-01 DOI: 10.1076/icsp.9.4.255.13675
Namvar Zohoori, Elizabeth Ward, Georgiana Gordon, Rainford Wilks, Deanna Ashley, Terrence Forrester

Using data for a one-year period from the Kingston Public Hospital (KPH) in Jamaica, we describe patterns of non-fatal violence-related injuries, and carry out simulation analysis to estimate rates of hospital admission under various injury reduction scenarios, and the potential savings that can be realized by reducing violent crimes. In this period there were 6107 registered violence-related visits to the KPH representing 11.5% of all recorded visits. Of these 16.6% (1001) were admitted. The most common methods of inflicting injury was by stabbing (52.1%), blunt injuries (37.9%) and gunshot wounds (7.3%). Multivariate analyses indicated that gunshot injuries, stab injuries, being male between the ages of 15 and 44 years, receiving the injury in November or December, and being injured by a stranger or unknown assailant, were significant correlates of a higher probability of admission. Simulation analysis with various injury reduction scenarios indicated decreases in the probability of admission ranging from 12% to 44%, with estimated savings of up to 31% of the annual supplies budget of KPH.

利用牙买加金斯敦公立医院(KPH)一年的数据,我们描述了非致命暴力相关伤害的模式,并进行了模拟分析,以估计各种减少伤害情景下的住院率,以及通过减少暴力犯罪可以实现的潜在节省。在此期间,KPH有6107宗与暴力有关的登记探访,占所有记录探访的11.5%。其中16.6%(1001人)被录取。最常见的致伤方式是刺伤(52.1%)、钝伤(37.9%)和枪伤(7.3%)。多变量分析表明,枪伤、刀伤、年龄在15岁至44岁之间的男性、在11月或12月受伤、被陌生人或未知袭击者伤害与入院概率显著相关。各种减少伤害情景的模拟分析表明,入院概率降低了12%至44%,估计可节省KPH年度供应预算的31%。
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引用次数: 15
期刊
Injury control and safety promotion
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