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Walking, cycling and transport safety: an analysis of child road deaths
Author(s) -
Reading Richard
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
child: care, health and development
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.832
H-Index - 82
eISSN - 1365-2214
pISSN - 0305-1862
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2214.2006.00706_7.x
Subject(s) - pedestrian , demography , injury prevention , poison control , medicine , occupational safety and health , population , cause of death , mortality rate , cycling , suicide prevention , geography , medical emergency , environmental health , archaeology , disease , pathology , sociology
Walking, cycling and transport safety: an analysis of child road deaths.
Sonkin B. , Edwards P. , Roberts I. & Green J.(2006)Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine,99,402–405.Objective To examine trends in road death rates for child pedestrians, cyclists and car occupants. Design Analysis of road traffic injury death rates per 100 000 children and death rates per 10 million passenger miles travelled. Setting England and Wales between 1985 and 2003. Participants Children aged 0–14 years old. Interventions None. Main outcome measures Death rates per 100 000 children and per 10 million child passenger miles for pedestrians, cyclists and car occupants. Results Death rates per head of population have declined for child pedestrians, cyclists and car occupants but pedestrian death rates remain higher (0.55 deaths/100 000 children; 95% CI 0.42–0.72 deaths) than those for car occupants (0.34 deaths; 95% CI 0.23–0.48 deaths) and cyclists (0.16 deaths; 95% CI 0.09–0.27 deaths). Since 1985, the average distance children travelled as a car occupant has increased by 70%; the average distance walked has declined by 19%; and the average distance cycled has declined by 58%. Taking into account distance travelled, there are about 50 times more child cyclist deaths (0.55 deaths/10 million passenger miles; 0.32–0.89) and nearly 30 times more child pedestrian deaths (0.27 deaths; 0.20–0.35) than there are deaths to child car occupants (0.01 deaths; 0.007–0.014). In 2003, children from families without access to a vehicle walked twice the distance walked by children in families with access to two or more vehicles. Conclusions More needs to be carried out to reduce the traffic injury death rates for child pedestrians and cyclists. This might encourage more walking and cycling and also has the potential to reduce social class gradients in injury mortality.