Skip to main content

Improving road safety in difficult times

Suggestions for improving road safety in difficult times include speed reduction.
By MJ Woof April 8, 2020 Read time: 1 min
20 is plenty, according to health researchers – image © courtesy of Adam Hill

Suggestions are being put forward on how best to optimise road safety in these difficult times, when hospitals are under pressure due to the Corona Virus. One important suggestion from a group of five health researchers is that speed limits should be reduced in all urban areas to 20mph/30km/h. Meanwhile speed limits on dual carriageways and motorways should be reduced to 50mph/80km/h according to the researchers.

Lowering speed limits will ensure that any collisions that do occur will be less severe, reducing the risk of crash victims requiring hospitalisation. Crash impact data also shows that lower speed limits also reduce the incidence of collisions.

The five researchers made their call for lowering speed limits in an article published in the British Medical Journal (BMJ).

The group also pointed out that in countries where speed limits have been reduced, there has been an ensuing drop in road crash numbers and also in the severity of any impacts, with an overall reduction in deaths and injuries.

Related Content

  • Chile’s new urban highway link
    May 2, 2022
    Nestling in a valley beside the Andes mountain range, Santiago has a growing population and has suffered from increasingly heavy congestion in recent years, requiring a new urban road link for which safety has been set as a priority for drivers - *iRAP reports
  • UNCIEF promoting safer commutes for children to education
    June 4, 2015
    Children should have the right of a safe journey to and from school, as part of a wider strategy to build safe, healthy and liveable communities, recommends a new report from UNICEF and the FIA Foundation. The report, ‘Safe to Learn’, was published to mark the 3rd United Nations Global Road Safety Week, which has a theme of child safety. The report was launched at an event at the World Bank in Washington DC by Zoleka Mandela, a global road safety activist, bereaved mother of a road traffic victim, and gran
  • Addressing a silent disaster
    September 24, 2012
    As India's economy registers 9% annual growth, promising material super-power status by mid-century, the nation is barely beginning to address a silent disaster, that of road casualties It was Dr. P K Sikdar [a director of International Consultants and Technocrats/ICT and a former director of the Central Road Research Institute/CRRI] who coined the phrase "silent disaster."
  • Barriers to European safety: how safe is safe?
    February 1, 2021
    Roberto Impero, chief executive of SMA Road Safety, and Stefano Caterino, head of SMA's marketing, urge a major rethink about how European crash cushions and end terminals are tested for safety certification.