Using a novel data linkage approach to investigate potential reductions in motor vehicle crash severity – An evaluation of strategic highway safety plan emphasis areas

•Developed linkage between police and EMS reported crashes for in-depth analysis of outcomes.•Found differences in injury severity levels between rear-end and other crash types.•Evaluated crash causation and injury outcomes for various traffic safety emphasis areas.•The findings can be coupled with...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of safety research 2020-09, Vol.74, p.9-15
Hauptverfasser: Tainter, Francis, Fitzpatrick, Cole, Gazillo, Jennifer, Riessman, Robin, Knodler, Michael
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Developed linkage between police and EMS reported crashes for in-depth analysis of outcomes.•Found differences in injury severity levels between rear-end and other crash types.•Evaluated crash causation and injury outcomes for various traffic safety emphasis areas.•The findings can be coupled with a paired hospital admissions data in future analyses. Introduction: With the significant number of motor-vehicle fatalities occurring on the nation’s roadways in recent years, there exists a need to integrate a more complete range of data sources, available at a regional or statewide level, to effectively evaluate existing safety concerns and quantify their impacts. Crash data alone does not provide ample crash-associated citation, injury, and roadway characteristics; therefore, a more cohesive dataset is required to accurately and completely analyze the true impacts of motor-vehicle crashes. Previously developed strategies linked crash data with citation and roadway inventory data to enhance the identification and optimization of highway safety strategies. Method: The main objective of this research focused on developing a new deterministic linkage between crash and Emergency Medical Services (EMS) data, by utilizing the Massachusetts Crash Data System (CDS) and the Massachusetts Ambulance Trip Record Information System (MATRIS). Results: After several iterations of match criterion, the validated linkage successfully matched 58.3% of MATRIS records (containing an Injury Cause of Motor Vehicle Crash) to a CDS person record (55011 linked pairs, between 2014 and 2016). The data linkage provided significant insight into injury trends in several highway safety emphasis areas such as roadway departure, speeding-related, and distraction-affected crashes. The findings from this research are twofold: (1) an established process for linking previously separate data sets, and (2) a mechanism for analysis that provides decision-makers and safety professionals with a better measure of crash outcomes.
ISSN:0022-4375
1879-1247
DOI:10.1016/j.jsr.2020.04.012