Khaleej Times

Slow down to save lives and prevent traffic accidents

Safer streets encourage more people to walk and cycle, helping to reduce air pollution

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Margaret Chan & MiChael BlooMBerg

We can save so many lives around the world if we just slow down. Each year, more than 1.25 million people – many of them young people – die in automobile crashes. And a large proportion of these deaths are preventabl­e: about one-third are due to vehicles traveling at excessive speeds. In low- and middle-income countries, that figure is closer to half. Regardless of where one lives, speeding is a lethal problem. Studies show that on most roads, in most countries, 40-50% of all cars travel above the posted speed limit. And whether or not a car is speeding can be the difference between life and death.

For example, someone who is hit by a vehicle traveling at 50 miles (80 kilometers) per hour has a three times higher risk of dying than if they had been hit by a vehicle moving at 30 miles per hour.

This means that just setting urban speed limits at 30 miles per hour or less, and allowing local authoritie­s to reduce speed limits further around schools and other areas with high pedestrian traffic, would save many lives. It is encouragin­g that 47 countries around the world are already implementi­ng these commonsens­e practices. But we must do far more to expand the reach of such measures, and to ensure that more government­s adopt them.

Not surprising­ly, countries that have embraced a comprehens­ive approach to road safety, such as the Netherland­s, Switzerlan­d, and the United Kingdom, have had the most success in reducing their rates of death and injury from automobile accidents.

These countries have made it a high priority to reduce rates of speeding, and they have taken steps to improve the safety of their roads, vehicles, drivers, and all others who use roads, including pedestrian­s and motorcycli­sts.

For example, proactive countries have built their roads to include features that calm traffic, such as roundabout­s. They have also establishe­d speed limits tailored to local road conditions, while stepping up enforcemen­t to deter traffic violations. And they have begun to require that all new cars include life-saving technologi­es such as autonomous emergency braking.

Municipal leaders worldwide – from Addis Ababa to Mumbai to Bangkok – have played a key role in implementi­ng these measures, which are not just saving lives, but also making their cities healthier in other ways.

Safer streets encourage more people to walk and cycle, helping to reduce air pollution, which has been linked to chronic respirator­y disease, cancer, and other noncommuni­cable diseases.

To build on these achievemen­ts, Bloomberg Philanthro­pies, the World Health Organizati­on, and other partners are working with municipal leaders to help them gather the data needed to identify problem areas more effectivel­y. They can then determine where to target their limited resources to make the biggest improvemen­ts.

We are also providing support for local authoritie­s to stage publicawar­eness campaigns that will help build grassroots support for new roadsafety legislatio­n and stronger penalties.

Improving road safety is one of the biggest opportunit­ies we have to save lives around the world. And the good news is that, starting with the solutions outlined above, we already know how to do it.

The fourth annual United Nations Global Road Safety Week, May 8-14, provides a chance to draw more attention to these solutions.

Over the course of the week, community events are being held in cities

Proactive countries have built their roads to include features that calm traffic, such as roundabout­s. They have also establishe­d speed limits tailored to local road conditions, while stepping up enforcemen­t to deter traffic violations

around the world, to help raise awareness of the problem and advance more solutions. These events will take many forms: street traffic will be slowed down, campaigns will be launched in many schools, and roundtable discussion­s will be held to explore how we can ensure that smart policies continue to spread.

All of these events and initiative­s will bring together local and national leaders in government, civil society, business, law enforcemen­t, and other sectors.

A world in which far fewer lives are lost to automobile accidents is possible and entirely within our reach. It is up to all of us to make it a reality.

— Margaret Chan is Director-General of the World Health Organizati­on. Michael Bloomberg is the World Health Organizati­on’s Global Ambassador

for Noncommuni­cable Diseases. — Project Syndicate

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