


Canada and the World
Current Events with a Canadian Perspective
Last update
19 November 2010
Highway Death Toll Keeps Rising
Worldwide, the number of people killed in road traffic crashes each year is estimated to be almost 1.2 million
Mary Ward has the dubious distinction of probably being the first person to die as a result of an accident involving what in her day was called a horseless carriage.
Ms. Ward, an Irish scientist was riding in her cousin’s steam-
That was on August 31, 1869 and Mary Ward has been joined by tens of millions of other victims of automobile accidents.
Steady Rise in Highway Fatalities
In his 1969 book Road Accidents: Prevent or Punish? (re-
From 1863 to 1870, 143 people were killed in road accidents; from 1891 to 1900 the number was 107; for 1931 to 1938 it was 311.
After the war came the explosion of private car ownership and the number of fatalities shot up to 10,278 for the year 1963 alone.
That kind of carnage got the attention of politicians and engineers. Highways were
made more safe, cars were designed to better protect occupants, seat belts were introduced,
policing of excessive speeding was stepped up, and campaigns to reduce drinking and
driving were brought in.
The result? In 2007, the U.K. Department of Transport reported 2,946 highway fatalities in 2007.
Worldwide Vehicle Deaths Take a Heavy Toll
The Commission for Global Road Safety has some grim news about vehicle deaths around the world:
The World Bank has some equally chilling numbers:
Solution to Crashes Are Available
As the British showed, there are ways to reduce the automobile death rate.
A study by Israeli and American researchers, published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine (December 2005), says that lowering speed limits and installing speed camera networks cuts the number of highway deaths.
The study points out that, “In the U.K., for example, the installation of speed cameras, roundabouts (traffic circles) and other measures in the 1990s reduced the number of road deaths by 33.9%.”
Other countries saw similar declines from similar measures: “Sweden experienced a 21% drop in fatal crashes, while the figure in Denmark dropped by 24%. In Victoria, Australia, road death tolls have fallen by some 50% in the last 15 years. In Queensland, Australia, 2,500 speed cameras were introduced between 1997 and 2001, resulting in a 31% drop in fatal crashes.
Without such measures being introduced worldwide the World Health Organization predicts a gloomy future. It sees road accidents killing two million people a year by 2020.
Image credits
ER24 EMS (Pty) Ltd
Sources
“Road Accidents: Prevent or Punish?” John Leeming, Cassell, London, 2007.
“Death and Injury from Motor Vehicle Crashes.” Elihu D. Richter et al, American Journal of Preventive Medicine, December 2005.
© Canada and the World, August 2010
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An estimated 3,000 people die on the world’s roads daily
The Commission for Global Road Safety reports that the World Bank has estimated “that developing countries lose approximately US$100 billion every year due to road crashes. This figure is twice the amount of all development aid provided by donors to developing countries.”

Mike Schinkel
Busted