Bikesrepublic

Global Status Report on Road Safety 2018

Sumber imej: NSTP

Kemalangan jalan raya sudah boleh dianggap sebagai kebiasaan di Malaysia. Manakan tidak, hampir setiap hari ada sahaja maklumat kemalangan yang akan dilaporkan media massa.

Setiap kemalangan ini terutamanya yang melibatkan nyawa akan memberi kesan mendalam terhadap ahli keluarga dan masyarakat sekeliling.

Bukan itu sahaja, kekerapan kemalangan maut jalan raya juga akan memberi kesan terhadap sistem kekeluargaan tatkala rata-rata mereka yang maut berusia sekitar 15 hingga 44 tahun – peringkat umur yang menjadi penyumbang kepada keluarga.

Antara faktor utama yang membawa kepada kemalangan jalan raya adalah , pembangunan tak terkawal, piawaian keselamatan yang rendah, pemandu cuai dan keletihan, pengaruh dadah dan alkohol, memandu melebihi had dan kegagalan memakai tali pinggang keledar.

Jadi tidak hairanlah Malaysia muncul sebagai negara ketiga di Asia yang merekodkan paling banyak kemalangan maut jalan raya – dibelakang Thailand dan Vietnam – menurut laporan Global Status Report on Road Safety 2018 yang diterbitkan World Health Organization (WHO) dan Bank Dunia, Disember lalu.

Laporan tersebut memetik sebanyak 7,152 kemalangan maut berlaku pada 2016, dengan 87 peratus mangsa adalah lelaki sementara 13 peratus adalah wanita.

Berikut jumlah kenderaan yang terdapat di Malaysia:

Jumlah kenderaan berdaftar di Malaysia: 27,613,120

Kereta dan kenderaan roda empat: 13,123,638

Motosikal dan kenderaan roda tiga: 12,677,041

Lori dan trak: 1,191,310

Bus: 59,977

Kenderaan lain: 561,154

Berdasarkan statistik di atas, hanya 91 peratus penunggang motosikal memakai topi keledar sementara pembonceng hanya 87 peratus.

Sementara itu, hanya 74 peratus pemandu memakai tali pinggang keledar dan hanya 10 peratus penumpang yang memakai.

WHO turut melaporkan daripada setiap kemalangan maut yang berlaku, lebih 15 individu yang akan mengalami kecederaan serius dan 70 lagi kecederaan ringan.

Selain itu, lebih daripada separuh jumlah kemalangan maut di Malaysia melibatkan penunggang/pembonceng motosikal.

Kajian mendapati lebih 89 peratus mangsa kemalangan motosikal adalah penunggang berusia sekitar 16 hingga 20 tahun dengan hanya 75 peratus penunggang memakai tali pinggang keledar.

WHO turut menegaskan bahawa setiap pengguna jalan raya perlu faham bahawa kelajuan membunuh.

Setiap 1 peratus kenaikan kelajuan akan meningkatkan 4 peratus risiko untuk berlakunya kemalangan.

Sumber imej: nationmultimedia.com
  • Laporan Pertubuhan Kesihatan Dunia (WHO) menunjukkan Thailand sebagai negara dengan kadar kematian kemalangan jalan raya tertinggi di kalangan negara Asia Tenggara.
  • India pula mempunyai kadar kematian kemalangan jalan raya tertinggi di seluruh dunia.
  • Kemalangan jalan raya adalah punca utama kematian bagi kanak-kanak dan orang dewasa di bawah umur 29 tahun.

(more…)

  • A World Health Organization (WHO) report highlighted that Thailand has the highest road accident death rate among Asian countries.

  • However, India saw the most killed in road accidents.

  • Road accidents is now the Number 1 cause of death for children and adults up to 29 years old.

The World Health Organization (WHO) has published their annual Global Status Report on Road Safety 2018. In the report, Thailand still has the deadliest roads in Asia while India saw the greatest number of lives lost in traffic accidents.

Although published in 2018, the report provides data collected from 175 countries in 2016.

Thailand’s status as the second deadliest roads in the world has improved to eighth with 32.7 deaths per 100,000 citizens. A whopping 74.4% (16,178) of the 21,745 killed were drivers/passengers of 2-wheeled vehicles. Traffic accidents kill an average of 21,491 persons in the country each year.

Risks of Renting a Motorcycle in Thailand and How to Insure Yourself

Eight African countries and one South American nation join Thailand in the Top 10.

In terms of pure numbers, however, the Indian subcontinent saw an almost unbelievable 150,785 reported deaths. Conversely, the WHO believes many more fatalities were probably unreported and as many as 299,091 were killed on India’s roads. The country’s population of over 1.3 billion people had the effect of lowering the rate to 22.6 per 100,000.

By comparison, China has the second highest total number of reported deaths from traffic accidents at 58,022 among her 1.4 billion citizens. Again, the WHO believes that an estimated total of 256,180 were killed in 2016. China’s road death rate was 18.2/100,000.

Malaysia’s road death rate is still high but has seen much improvements at 23.6/100,000 with a total of 7,152 reported cases. There was no official number in the report, but it is widely believed that some 60% of all traffic-related deaths involve motorcycles.

Our neighbor Indonesia reported 31,282 traffic deaths in that year. Fatalities on two-wheel vehicles contributed 73.6% to the total figure. However, they have a low rate at 12.2/100,000 due to their large 261 million population.

The WHO added that traffic accidents are now the leading cause of death among children and adults up to 29 years old, and 8thhighest among people of all ages. At 1.35 million deaths each year, more die in road accidents than HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and diarrheal diseases. The situation is worsening and a person is killed every 24 seconds somewhere in the world.

Sobering thoughts for 2019.

Source: World Health Organization

Archive

Follow us on Facebook

Follow us on YouTube