Road Safety Management – The need for a systematic approach
(2016) In The Open Transportation Journal 10(1). p.137-155- Abstract
- In order to achieve significant improvements in road safety at the national level, there is a need for a systematic approach to road safety management with clear responsibilities and accountability. In this paper – after a review of the literature on guidelines, recommendations and research findings – twelve essential elements of such a systematic approach are pointed out, and corresponding relevant issues are discussed. These elements are: 1) Define the burden and nature of road casualties; 2) Gain commitment and support from decision makers; 3) Establish road safety policy; 4) Define institutional roles and responsibilities; 5) Identify road safety problems; 6) Set road safety targets; 7) Formulate a strategy and action plan; 8) Allocate... (More)
- In order to achieve significant improvements in road safety at the national level, there is a need for a systematic approach to road safety management with clear responsibilities and accountability. In this paper – after a review of the literature on guidelines, recommendations and research findings – twelve essential elements of such a systematic approach are pointed out, and corresponding relevant issues are discussed. These elements are: 1) Define the burden and nature of road casualties; 2) Gain commitment and support from decision makers; 3) Establish road safety policy; 4) Define institutional roles and responsibilities; 5) Identify road safety problems; 6) Set road safety targets; 7) Formulate a strategy and action plan; 8) Allocate responsibility for measures; 9) Ensure funding; 10) Apply measures with known effectiveness; 11) Monitor performance; and 12) Stimulate research and capacity building. The main conclusions are that: a) Monetary values of statistical life have to be established; b) The police register of accidents should be combined with the hospital register; c) Exposure data for all types of road users is necessary; d) The three-dimensional analysis of road safety problems should be employed; e) Safety performance indicators should be used; f) Only countermeasures with known effectiveness should be applied; g) Performance of countermeasures should be monitored on a yearly basis; and h) Commitment from decision makers is decisive!. (Less)
- Abstract (Swedish)
- In order to achieve significant improvements in road safety at the national level, there is a need for a systematic approach to road safety management with clear responsibilities and accountability. In this paper – after a review of the literature on guidelines, recommendations and research findings – twelve essential elements of such a systematic approach is pointed out, and corresponding relevant issues are discussed. These elements are: 1) Define the burden and nature of road casualties; 2) Gain commitment and support from decision makers; 3) Establish road safety policy; 4) Define institutional roles and responsibilities; 5) Identify road safety problems; 6) Set road safety targets; 7) Formulate a strategy and action plan; 8) Allocate... (More)
- In order to achieve significant improvements in road safety at the national level, there is a need for a systematic approach to road safety management with clear responsibilities and accountability. In this paper – after a review of the literature on guidelines, recommendations and research findings – twelve essential elements of such a systematic approach is pointed out, and corresponding relevant issues are discussed. These elements are: 1) Define the burden and nature of road casualties; 2) Gain commitment and support from decision makers; 3) Establish road safety policy; 4) Define institutional roles and responsibilities; 5) Identify road safety problems; 6) Set road safety targets; 7) Formulate a strategy and action plan; 8) Allocate responsibility for measures; 9) Ensure funding; 10) Apply measures with known effectiveness; 11) Monitor performance; 12) Stimulate research and capacity building. The main conclusions are that: a) Monetary values of statistical life have to be established; b) The police register of accidents should be combined with the hospital register; c) Exposure data for all types of road users is necessary; d) The three-dimensional analysis of road safety problems should be employed; e) Safety performance indicators should be used; f) Only countermeasures with known effectiveness should be applied; g) Performance of countermeasures should be monitored on a yearly basis; i) Commitment from decision makers is decisive! (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/549e562d-bb90-48fd-a569-d029abac8742
- author
- Varhelyi, Andras LU
- organization
- alternative title
- Trafiksäkerhetsledning - behovet av systematiskt tillvägagångssätt
- publishing date
- 2016-12-28
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- Road safety management, Combined accident data register, Exposure data, Three-dimensional analysis of road safety problems, Safety performance indicators, MOnitoring of performance
- in
- The Open Transportation Journal
- volume
- 10
- issue
- 1
- pages
- 137 - 155
- publisher
- Bentham Science Publishers
- external identifiers
-
- scopus:85050020232
- ISSN
- 1874-4478
- DOI
- 10.2174/1874447801610010137
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 549e562d-bb90-48fd-a569-d029abac8742
- date added to LUP
- 2017-01-10 11:34:08
- date last changed
- 2022-01-30 17:00:23
@article{549e562d-bb90-48fd-a569-d029abac8742, abstract = {{In order to achieve significant improvements in road safety at the national level, there is a need for a systematic approach to road safety management with clear responsibilities and accountability. In this paper – after a review of the literature on guidelines, recommendations and research findings – twelve essential elements of such a systematic approach are pointed out, and corresponding relevant issues are discussed. These elements are: 1) Define the burden and nature of road casualties; 2) Gain commitment and support from decision makers; 3) Establish road safety policy; 4) Define institutional roles and responsibilities; 5) Identify road safety problems; 6) Set road safety targets; 7) Formulate a strategy and action plan; 8) Allocate responsibility for measures; 9) Ensure funding; 10) Apply measures with known effectiveness; 11) Monitor performance; and 12) Stimulate research and capacity building. The main conclusions are that: a) Monetary values of statistical life have to be established; b) The police register of accidents should be combined with the hospital register; c) Exposure data for all types of road users is necessary; d) The three-dimensional analysis of road safety problems should be employed; e) Safety performance indicators should be used; f) Only countermeasures with known effectiveness should be applied; g) Performance of countermeasures should be monitored on a yearly basis; and h) Commitment from decision makers is decisive!.}}, author = {{Varhelyi, Andras}}, issn = {{1874-4478}}, keywords = {{Road safety management; Combined accident data register; Exposure data; Three-dimensional analysis of road safety problems; Safety performance indicators; MOnitoring of performance}}, language = {{eng}}, month = {{12}}, number = {{1}}, pages = {{137--155}}, publisher = {{Bentham Science Publishers}}, series = {{The Open Transportation Journal}}, title = {{Road Safety Management – The need for a systematic approach}}, url = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/19638859/RSM_TOTJ_10_137.pdf}}, doi = {{10.2174/1874447801610010137}}, volume = {{10}}, year = {{2016}}, }