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MUNDS paper -Fildes et al 2013.pdf (1.02 MB)

Evaluation of the benefits of vehicle safety technology: the MUNDS study

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journal contribution
posted on 2013-05-02, 09:26 authored by Brian Fildes, Michael Keall, Pete Thomas, Kalle Parkarri, Lucia Pennisi, Claes Tingvall
Real-world retrospective evaluation of the safety benefits of new integrated safety technologies is hampered by the lack of sufficient data to assess early reliable benefits. This MUNDS study set out to examine if a “prospective” case-control meta-analysis had the potential to provide more rapid and rigorous analyses of vehicle and infrastructure safety improvements. To examine the validity of the approach, an analysis of the effectiveness of ESC using a consistent analytic strategy across 6 European and Australasian databases was undertaken. It was hypothesised that the approach would be valid if the results of the MUNDS analysis were consistent with those published earlier (this would confirm the suitability of the MUNDS approach). The findings confirm the hypothesis and also found stronger and more robust findings across the range of crash-types, road conditions, vehicle sizes and speed zones than previous. The study recommends that while a number of limitations were identified with the findings that need be addressed in future research, the MUNDS approach nevertheless should be adopted widely for the benefit of all vehicle occupants.

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  • Design

Citation

FILDES, B. ... et al., 2013. Evaluation of the benefits of vehicle safety technology: the MUNDS study. Accident Analysis and Prevention, 55 (June 2013), pp. 274–281.

Publisher

© Elsevier Ltd.

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Publication date

2013

Notes

This paper was published in the journal, Accident Analysis and Prevention [© Elsevier Ltd.] and the definitive version is available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aap.2013.02.027

ISSN

0001-4575

Language

  • en

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