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Journal Article

Citation

Shen Y, Hermans E, Bao Q, Brijs T, Wets G. Traffic Injury Prev. 2015; 16(3): 246-253.

Affiliation

a Transportation Research Institute (IMOB) - Hasselt University Wetenschapspark 5 bus 6, 3590 Diepenbeek, Belgium , +32 11 26 91 43 , +32 11 26 91 99 , elke.hermans@uhasselt.be , qiong.bao@uhasselt.be , tom.brijs@uhasselt.be , geert.wets@uhasselt.be.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/15389588.2014.930831

PMID

24912069

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Almost all of the current road safety benchmarking studies focus entirely on fatalities, which however, represent only one measure of the magnitude of the road safety problem. The main objective of this paper was to investigate the possibility of including the number of serious injuries in addition to the number of fatalities for road safety benchmarking and to further illuminate its impact on the countries' ranking.

METHODS: We introduced the technique of data envelopment analysis (DEA) to the road safety domain and developed a DEA-based road safety model (DEA-RS) in this study. Moreover, we outlined different types of possible weight restrictions and adopted two of them to indicate the relationship between road fatalities and serious injuries for the sake of rational benchmarking. One was a relative weight restriction based on the information of their shadow price, and the other was a virtual weight restriction using a priori knowledge about the importance level of these two aspects.

RESULTS: By computing the most optimal road safety risk scores of 10 European countries based on the different models, we found that United Kingdom was the only best-performing country no matter which model was utilized. However, countries such as the Netherlands, Sweden and Switzerland, were no longer best-performing when the serious injuries were integrated. On the contrary, Spain, which ranked almost at the bottom among all the countries when only the number of road fatalities was considered, became a relatively well performing country when integrating its number of serious injuries in the evaluation. In general, no matter whether the country's road safety ranking was improved or deteriorated, most of the countries achieved a higher risk score when the number of serious injuries was included, which implied that compared to the road fatalities, more policy attention has to be paid to improve the situation of serious injuries in most countries.

CONCLUSIONS: Given the importance of considering the serious injuries in addition to the fatalities for inter-national benchmarking of road safety, the proposed model (i.e., the DEA-RS model with weight restrictions) turned out to be effective in deriving reasonable results. We are thereby also inspired to apply this kind of model to a more complete road safety benchmarking practice in the future when the data on for example the number of slight injuries, the degree of property damage, and the number of crashes are ready (i.e., comparable) to use.


Language: en

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