Identification of Causal Factors and Potential Countermeasures for Fatal Rural Crashes
2005-10-01
Loading...
View/Download File
Persistent link to this item
Statistics
View StatisticsJournal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Title
Identification of Causal Factors and Potential Countermeasures for Fatal Rural Crashes
Authors
Published Date
2005-10-01
Publisher
Type
Abstract
This project was divided into three phases. In phase 1 ten fatal run-off-road crashes were reconstructed from crash scene diagrams and investigation reports. We found evidence of excessive speed in five of these, and a failure to properly use seatbelts eight of the ten. For seven of these we found that barriers complying with Test Level 3 of NCHRP Report 350 would probably have stopped the crashing vehicle's encroachment. In phase 2 we developed a vehicle trajectory simulation model and used it reconstruct five fatal median-crossing crashes. We found clear evidence of excessive speed in one of these, and in three of the five the encroaching vehicle would probably have been restrained by Test Level 3-compliant barriers. In phase 3 five teams of traffic safety professionals reviewed accident reports from a sample of fatal rural crashes, with the aim of identifying possible causal factors and potential countermeasures. The most frequently identified causal factors were driver inexperience and failure to properly use restraints, while provision of rumble strips, improvements to roadsides or cross-slopes, and provision of guardrails or barriers were the most frequently-cited countermeasures.
Keywords
Description
Related to
Replaces
License
Collections
Series/Report Number
Funding information
Guidestar
Isbn identifier
Doi identifier
Previously Published Citation
Other identifiers
Mn/DOT 2005-42
Suggested citation
Davis, Gary A.; Pei, Jianping; Morris, Paul. (2005). Identification of Causal Factors and Potential Countermeasures for Fatal Rural Crashes. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/1009.
Content distributed via the University Digital Conservancy may be subject to additional license and use restrictions applied by the depositor. By using these files, users agree to the Terms of Use. Materials in the UDC may contain content that is disturbing and/or harmful. For more information, please see our statement on harmful content in digital repositories.