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SUMMARY REPORT |
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Publication Number: FHWA-RD-95-163
Date: 1995 |
Pedestrian and Bicycle Crash Types of the Early 1990'sTechnical Summary
This technical summary announces the completion of a Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) study that is fully documented in a separate report (FHWA-RD-95-163) of the same title. Introduction Approximately 6,500 pedestrians and 900 bicyclists are killed each year as a result of collisions with motor vehicles. As a group, pedestrians and bicyclists comprise more than 14 percent of all highway fatalities each year. Pedestrians account for as much as 40 to 50 percent of traffic fatalities in some large urban areas. The 1991 General Estimates System (GES) data indicate that 92,000 pedestrians and 67,000 bicyclists were injured in this type of crash. Many more injuries are not reported to record-keeping authorities. A study by Stutts et al. (1990) showed that fewer than two-thirds of the bicycle-motor vehicle crashes that were serious enough to require emergency room treatment were reported on State motor vehicle crash files. In the 1970's, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) developed a system of "typing" pedestrian and bicyclist crashes. Each identified crash type is defined by a specific sequence of events, and each has precipitating actions, predisposing factors, and characteristic populations and/or locations that can be targeted for intervention. Examples of pedestrian-motor vehicle crash types include:
Examples of bicycle-motor vehicle crash types include:
Because the frequencies and/or distributions of these types of crashes may have changed since the original typing schemes were developed, further refinement of the crash types may no be advisable. Also, there is a need to better describe these pedestrian and bicyclist accident types with respect to the roadway conditions and features where they occur. With many newly appointed pedestrian-bicyclist coordinators in the states as a result of the Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991 (ISTEA), as well as the increased presence of these coordinators at the local level, it is also probably time to develop simpler crash-typing schemes for both pedestrian and bicyclist crashes. A simplified typing scheme would easily allow coordinators and other evaluators to become more familiar with and and track such crashes over time. Purpose The purpose of this research was to apply the basic NHTSA pedestrian and bicyclist typologies to a sample of recent crashes, and to refine and update the crash-type distributions, paying particular attention to roadway and locational factors.
The specific study aims were to: Submit comments to the author(carol.tan.esse@fhwa.dot.gov) of this report.
FHWA-RD-95-163 |