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    03Oct2017

    Road safety – threats and opportunities for poor countries.

    by admin,  0 Comments

    Road safety – threats and opportunities for poor countries.

    Olive C Kobusingye
    Dr. Olive C Kobusingye, Regional Advisor, Disability/Injury Prevention and Rehabilitation
    WHO/AFRO, Brazzaville

    Chances are that everyone reading this will either have lost a close friend, relative, or work colleague in a road traffic crash in the last couple of years. Chances are, the reports said it was an “accident”. There might even have been police reports giving the “cause of the accident.” Now, think about the meaning of the word “accident” – most people would agree it is an unpredictable event, one for which you could not possibly have prepared – it just happened. Now, think again.

    Can we predict what will happen when a cyclist’s unprotected head hits the concrete at 100 kms an hour? Can we predict what will happen when a powerful car races down a road a few meters away from the entrance of a primary school, just as the kids are leaving school? Can we predict what will happen when a matatu(commuter mini bus) driver gets behind the wheel at dusk, after a few bottles of alcohol, heading for a destination six hours away? And can we predict what will happen when a mosquito bites a baby, just after feeding on a person sick from malaria? Well – chances are, the first three scenarios will be called accidental, and the last one will be targeted for prevention!

    The truth is, all four are perfectly predictable, and preventable. The more than 3, 200 persons dying on the world’s road every day have become predictable – we know they will happen, we know where they will happen, and what kind of people will be involved. Yet the majority of communities and governments still call them accidental, and make no concrete provision for their prevention.

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