THE EPIDEMIOLOGY OF ROAD ACCIDENTS IN PAPUA NEW GUINEA PORT MORESBY POST-MORTEM RECORDS, 1975-78
The number of fatal road accidents in Papua New Guinea has risen by more than 400% between 1968 and 1978. Papua New Guinea now has over thirteen times as many fatal road accidents per 10,000 registered vehicles as Great Britain. The Highlands show fatal accident rates about three times higher than those for Papua New Guinea as a whole. Of 121 road accident victims coming to post-mortem in Port Moresby between 1975 and 1978, two-thirds were young adult males. Deaths were nearly equally divided between passengers and pedestrians with drivers forming only 16% of the total. Post-mortem blood alcohol levels were above 80 mg% in 42% of the victims tested and very high levels were found in a third of the drivers. A plea is made for safer passenger vehicles, the use of seat belts and the introduction of breath testing for alcohol, along with public education to reduce the toll of accidents.
-
Corporate Authors:
Medical Society of Papua New Guinea
Box 6665
Boroko, Papua New Guinea -
Authors:
- Wyatt, G B
- Publication Date: 1980
Media Info
- Features: References; Tables;
- Pagination: p. 60-65
-
Serial:
- Papua New Guinea Medical Journal
- Volume: 23
- Publisher: Medical Society of Papua New Guinea
Subject/Index Terms
- TRT Terms: Alcohol breath tests; Blood alcohol levels; Crash rates; Crashes; Drivers; Drunk drivers; Drunk driving; Epidemiology; Fatalities; Manual safety belts; Passengers; Pedestrians; Safety education; Traffic crashes
- Uncontrolled Terms: Motor vehicle accidents
- Subject Areas: Education and Training; Passenger Transportation; Pedestrians and Bicyclists; Safety and Human Factors;
Filing Info
- Accession Number: 00376303
- Record Type: Publication
- Source Agency: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
- Report/Paper Numbers: HS-034 205
- Files: HSL, USDOT
- Created Date: Jul 30 1983 12:00AM