Killed or Seriously Injured

Killed or Seriously Injured (KSI) is a standard metric for safety policy, particularly in transportation and road safety.

Definition

United Kingdom definitions

United States definitions

The definitions used in the USA are as follows:[4]

Issues

Figures for fatalities are normally highly reliable in industrialised countries and few if any fatalities go unrecorded. Fatality figures are however often too low making it hard to see trends over time for one place.

Figures for the number of people seriously injured typically being an order of magnitude larger than the number of people killed and are therefore more likely to be statistically significant. However, classification of serious injuries is open to opinion, by medical staff or by non-medical professionals, such as police officers and may therefore vary over time and between places.

Figures for slight injuries are considered highly unreliable, largely due to under-reporting where injuries are self-treated.[5]

See also

References

  1. "Progress towards the 2010 targets". Parliament. Human casualties who sustain injuries leading to death less than 30 days after the accident. (This is the usual international definition, adopted by the Vienna Convention in 1968
  2. "Progress towards the 2010 targets". Parliament. An injury for which a person is detained in hospital as an 'in- patient', injury or any of the following injuries whether or not they are detained in hospital: fractures, concussion, internal injuries, crushings, burns (excluding friction burns), severe cuts, severe general shock requiring medical treatment and injuries causing death 30 or more days after the accident. An injured casualty is recorded as seriously or slightly injured by the police on the basis of information available within a short time of the accident. This generally will not reflect the results of a medical examination, but may be influenced according to whether the casualty is hospitalised or not. Hospitalisation procedures will vary regionally.
  3. "Progress towards the 2010 targets". Parliament. An injury of a minor character such as a sprain (including neck whiplash injury), bruise or cut which are not judged to be severe, or slight shock requiring roadside assistance. This definition includes injuries not requiring medical treatment.
  4. "FARS coding and validation manual" (pdf).
  5. iRAP International Transport Statistics Database :: Safety: Data Definitions and Caveats

External links

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