Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Accidents involving pedestrians with their backs to traffic or facing traffic: an evaluation of crash characteristics and injuries.

Chen, Ping-Ling; Jou, Rong-Chang; Saleh, Wafaa; Pai, Chih-Wei

Authors

Ping-Ling Chen

Rong-Chang Jou

Chih-Wei Pai



Abstract

This paper examines pedestrian anatomical injuries and crash characteristics in back-to-traffic and facing-traffic crashes. Pedestrian crashes involving pedestrians walking along streets (i.e. with their backs to traffic or facing traffic) have been overlooked in literature. Although this is not the most frequent type of crash, the crash consequence to pedestrians is a safety concern. Combining Taiwan A1A2 police-reported accident data and data from the National Health Insurance Database from years 2003–2013, this paper examines anatomical injuries and crash characteristics in back-to-traffic and facing-traffic crashes. There were a total of 830 and 2267 pedestrian casualties in back-to-traffic and facing-traffic crashes respectively. The injuries sustained by pedestrians and crash characteristics of these two crash types were compared with those of other crossing types of crashes (nearside crash, nearside dart-out crash, offside crash, and offside dart-out crash). Odds of various injuries to body regions were estimated using logistic regressions. Key findings include that the percentage of fatalities in back-to-traffic crashes is the highest; logistic models reveal that pedestrians in back-to-traffic crashes sustained more head, neck, and spinal injuries than did pedestrians in other crash types, and unlit darkness and non-built-up roadways were associated with an increased risk of pedestrian head injuries. Several crash features (e.g. unlit darkness, overtaking manoeuvres, phone use by pedestrians and drivers, and intoxicated drivers) are more frequently evident in back-to-traffic crashes than in other types of crashes. The current research suggests that in terms of crash consequence, facing traffic is safer than back to traffic.

Citation

Chen, P., Jou, R., Saleh, W., & Pai, C. (2016). Accidents involving pedestrians with their backs to traffic or facing traffic: an evaluation of crash characteristics and injuries. Journal of advanced transportation, 50(5), 736-751. https://doi.org/10.1002/atr.1372

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Feb 4, 2016
Online Publication Date Mar 9, 2016
Publication Date Aug 2, 2016
Deposit Date May 11, 2017
Publicly Available Date Jul 19, 2018
Journal Journal of Advanced Transportation
Electronic ISSN 0197-6729
Publisher Wiley
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 50
Issue 5
Pages 736-751
DOI https://doi.org/10.1002/atr.1372
Keywords Pedestrian injury, traffic accidents,
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/id/eprint/10212
Contract Date Jul 19, 2018

Files

Accidents involving pedestrians with their backs to traffic or facingtraffic: an evaluation of crash characteristics and injuries (246 Kb)
PDF







You might also like



Downloadable Citations