World report on road traffic injury prevention
Road traffic injuries are a
major but neglected public health challenge that requires concerted
efforts for effective and sustainable prevention. Of all the
systems with which people have to deal every day, road traffic
systems are the most complex and the most dangerous. Worldwide, an
estimated 1.2 million people are killed in road crashes each year
and as many as 50 million are injured. Projections indicate that
these figures will increase by about 65% over the next 20 years
unless there is new commitment to prevention. Nevertheless, the
tragedy behind these figures attracts less mass media attention
than other, less frequent types of tragedy.
The
World report on road traffic injury prevention is the first
major report being jointly issued by the World Health Organization
(WHO) and the World Bank on this subject. It underscores their
concern that unsafe road traffic systems are seriously harming
global public health and development. It contends that the level of
road traffic injury is unacceptable and that it is largely
avoidable.
Order
print copies of the report from the WHO online book shop.
Please note: If you already have a hard copy of this
report, please download the corrigenda below, which replace table
A.4 in the statistical annex and a paragraph on page 35.
FULL REPORT
- Arabic [pdf 11.7Mb]
- Chinese [pdf 50Mb]
- English [pdf 5.53Mb]
-
French
- Russian [pdf 3.9Mb]
-
Spanish
-
Thai [pdf 982kb]
CHAPTERS
-
Cover [pdf 337kb]
-
Introduction [pdf 265kb]
-
Chapter 1: The fundamentals [pdf 594kb]
-
Chapter 2: The global impact [pdf 730kb]
-
Chapter 3: Risk factors [pdf 555kb]
-
Chapter 4: Interventions [pdf 604kb]
-
Chapter 5: Conclusions and recommendations [pdf 143kb]
-
Glossary of terms [pdf 87kb]
-
Statistical annex [pdf 2.05Mb]
-
Index [pdf 164kb]
-
Corrigenda [pdf 69kb]
(http://www.who.int/violence_injury_prevention/publications/road_traffic/world_report/en/index.html)
加载中,请稍候......