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Pedestrians’ safety in Poland and use of reflective materials

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EN
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EN
The subject of pedestrian safety is particularly important in Poland, where the risk of mortality is very high compared to other European Union (EU) countries. In Poland, 60% of all killed pedestrians lost their lives at night, mostly away from urban areas. The current article focuses on pedestrians’ compliance with the law requirements of the mandatory use of reflective elements at night in non-urban areas since its introduction in Poland in 2014 based on a data analysis and survey on pedestrians’ attitudes and behaviours. An analysis of pedestrian accidents, fatalities, and serious injuries at night five years before and five years after 2014 showed an improvement in pedestrian safety more in non-urban areas (where the law on reflective elements is obligatory) than in urban areas. This study is the first published work to present comprehensive results from an in-depth national survey about people’s attitudes and behaviours regarding the use of reflective elements. The data were obtained from 600 observed and 400 questioned pedestrians in 2018. Observations from 2018 showed that only 21% of pedestrians respected the obligation to wear reflective elements at night outside urban, even though 46% of respondents declared in questionnaires that they wore such elements. Pedestrians who used reflective devices in non-urban areas at night were mainly young people aged 40 years old or younger. They used reflective clothing (shoes, trousers, backpacks); 79% of observed pedestrians did not wear reflective elements at night according to questionnaires from 2018. More pedestrians (60%) who didn’t use any reflective wore black clothing, which made them not visible to drivers and put them at risk of being killed. A comparison of the data showed a positive change in pedestrians’ attitudes due to this obligation. In 2015 only 35% of respondents knew that the use of reflective elements was obligatory in some situations; in 2018, almost half of them (46%) did. The analysis carried out in the present study indicated that the preventive action of introducing the mandatory use of reflective elements at night by pedestrians outside urban areas has slowly improved the safety of pedestrians and decreased the numbers of accidents, serious injuries, and fatalities. Changes introduced into Polish traffic rules have improved pedestrians’ safety on roads since 2014; however, there is still an immense need to carry on social actions and campaigns promoting the use of reflective elements to educate road users to change pedestrians’ behaviours.
Czasopismo
Rocznik
Strony
127--139
Opis fizyczny
Bibliogr. 19 poz.
Twórcy
  • Motor Transport Institute; Jagiellońska 80, 03-301 Warsaw, Poland
  • Motor Transport Institute; Jagiellońska 80, 03-301 Warsaw, Poland
Bibliografia
  • 1. European Commission. Directorate General for Mobility and Transport. Community database on Accidents on the Road in Europe (CARE). Access 5 October 2020.
  • 2. Polskie Obserwatorium Bezpieczeństwa Ruchu Drogowego. [In Polish: Polish Road Safety Observatory]. Available at: https://www.obserwatorium.brd. 2020.
  • 3. European Road Safety Observatory Facts and Figures - Pedestrians - 2020. European Commission (2020) Facts and Figures Pedestrians. European Road Safety, Observatory. Brussels, European Commission, Directorate General for Transport. Available at: https://ec.europa.eu/transport/road_safety/system/files/2021-07/facts_figures_pedestrians_final_20210323.pdf. 2022.
  • 4. Opracowanie własne na podstawie danych Polskiego Obserwatorium Bezpieczeństwa Ruchu Drogowego. Available at: https://www.obserwatoriumbrd.pl. 2020. [In Polish: Own analysis on data of Polish Road Safety Observatory].
  • 5. European Commission. Traffic Safety Basic Facts on Pedestrians. European Commission. Directorate General for Transport. June, 2018.
  • 6. Olszewski, P. & Szagała, P. & Wolański, M. & Zielińska, A. Pedestrian fatality risk in accidents at unsignalized zebra crosswalks in Poland. Accident Analysis & Prevention Elsevier. November, 2015. Vol. 84. P. 83-91.
  • 7. Gaca, S. & Kiec, M. Risk of accidents during darkness on roads with different technical standards. In: 16th Road Safety on Four Continents Conference. Beijing, China 15-17 May 2013.
  • 8. Focant, N. & Martensen, H. Effects of darkness on road safety, European Road Safety Decision Support System, developed by the H2020 project SafetyCube. 2016. Available at: https://www.roadsafety-dss.eu.
  • 9. Johansson, Ö. & Wanvik, P.O. & Elvik, R. A new method for assessing the risk of accident associated with darkness. Accident Analysis and Prevention. 2009. Vol. 41(4). P. 809-815. DOI: http://doi.org/10.1016/j.aap.2009.04.003.
  • 10. Aylward P. & O’Connor, P. Pedestrian safety in South Australia. Adelaide: Road Safety Division. 1987. ISBN: 9780724385614.
  • 11. Luoma, J. & Schumanna, J. & Traubea, E.C. Effects of retroreflector positioning on nighttime recognition of pedestrians. Accident Analysis & Prevention. 1996. Vol. 28. No. 3. P. 377-383.
  • 12. Blomberg, R. & Hale, A. & Preusser, D. Conspicuity for pedestrians and bicyclists: definition of the problem, development and test of countermeasures. Report DOT HS-806 563. US Department of Transportation. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Washington, DC. 1984.
  • 13. Elvik, R. & Hoye, A. & Vaa, T. The handbooks of Road Safety Measures. Norway, 2009. Emerald Group Publishing Limited. ISBN: 978-1-84855-250-0.
  • 14. Ustawa z dnia 26 lipca 2013 r. o zmianie ustawy - Prawo o ruchu drogowym. Dz. U. z dnia 30 sierpnia 2013 r. [In Polish: The Act from 26 July of 2013 Amendment to The Road Traffic Law. Journal of Laws on 30 August 2013].
  • 15. Nowe przepisy dot. elementów odblaskowych. [In Polish: New regulations on reflective elements].
  • Available at: https://www.krbrd.gov.pl/nowe-przepisy-dot-elementow-odblaskowych/
  • 16. Dąbrowska-Loranc, M. & Zielińska, A. & Skoczyński, P. & Sicińska, K. & et al. Badania zachowań pieszych i relacji pieszy-kierowca wrzesień-grudzień 2018 r. Krajowa Rada Bezpieczeństwa ruchu drogowego. 2019. [In Polish: Dąbrowska-Loranc, M. & Zielińska, A. & Skoczyński, P. Sicinska, K. & et al. Study of pedestrian behauviour and pedestrian - car driver relations September-December 2018. The Secretariat of the National Road Safety Council. 2019].
  • 17. Jamroz, K. & Budzynski, M. & Gaca, S. & Kiec, M. & et al. The methodology of systematic study on pedestrian behavior and pedestrian - car driver relations. The paper presents the results of analyzes of methodologies for systematic studies of pedestrian behavior and pedestrian-driver relations (for the Secretariat of the National Road Safety Council). 2015.
  • 18. The European Road Safety Observatory | TRIMIS (europa.eu). 2022. Available at: https://trimis.ec.europa.eu/project/european-road-safety-observatory
  • 19. Buttler, I. Pedestrians. ESRA2 Thematic report No. 10. ESRA project (E-Survey of Road users’ Attitudes). Warsaw, Motor Transport Institute. Poland, 2020.
Uwagi
PL
Opracowanie rekordu ze środków MEiN, umowa nr SONP/SP/546092/2022 w ramach programu "Społeczna odpowiedzialność nauki" - moduł: Popularyzacja nauki i promocja sportu (2022-2023).
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
Identyfikator YADDA
bwmeta1.element.baztech-6a929885-0896-414f-8a2b-b922bec03c87
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