The effectiveness of using a simple ARIA based geographical classification to identify road crash patterns in rural and urban areas of Queensland


Autoria(s): Steinhardt, Dale A.; Sheehan, Mary C.; Siskind, Victor
Data(s)

12/11/2009

Resumo

Research has noted a ‘pronounced pattern of increase with increasing remoteness' of death rates in road crashes. However, crash characteristics by remoteness are not commonly or consistently reported, with definitions of rural and urban often relying on proxy representations such as prevailing speed limit. The current paper seeks to evaluate the efficacy of the Accessibility / Remoteness Index of Australia (ARIA+) to identifying trends in road crashes. ARIA+ does not rely on road-specific measures and uses distances to populated centres to attribute a score to an area, which can in turn be grouped into 5 classifications of increasing remoteness. The current paper uses applications of these classifications at the broad level of Australian Bureau of Statistics' Statistical Local Areas, thus avoiding precise crash locating or dedicated mapping software. Analyses used Queensland road crash database details for all 31,346 crashes resulting in a fatality or hospitalisation occurring between 1st July, 2001 and 30th June 2006 inclusive. Results showed that this simplified application of ARIA+ aligned with previous definitions such as speed limit, while also providing further delineation. Differences in crash contributing factors were noted with increasing remoteness such as a greater representation of alcohol and ‘excessive speed for circumstances.' Other factors such as the predominance of younger drivers in crashes differed little by remoteness classification. The results are discussed in terms of the utility of remoteness as a graduated rather than binary (rural/urban) construct and the potential for combining ARIA crash data with census and hospital datasets.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/28664/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/28664/1/c28664.pdf

http://www.rsconference.com

Steinhardt, Dale A., Sheehan, Mary C., & Siskind, Victor (2009) The effectiveness of using a simple ARIA based geographical classification to identify road crash patterns in rural and urban areas of Queensland. In Proceedings of 2009 Road Safety Research, Policing and Education Conference, Sydney, New South Wales.

Direitos

Copyright 2009 Please consult the authors.

Fonte

Centre for Accident Research & Road Safety - Qld (CARRS-Q); Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation; School of Psychology & Counselling

Palavras-Chave #080604 Database Management #111706 Epidemiology #170113 Social and Community Psychology #160403 Social and Cultural Geography #Remoteness #ARIA #geographic classification #rural #urban #crash factors
Tipo

Conference Paper