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Cited 47 time in webofscience Cited 60 time in scopus
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Preventing Emergency Vehicle Crashes: Status and Challenges of Human Factors Issuesopen access

Authors
Hsiao, HongweiChang, JoonhoSimeonov, Peter
Issue Date
Nov-2018
Publisher
SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
Keywords
police vehicle; ambulance; fire truck; intersection; roadway design; driver assistance systems
Citation
HUMAN FACTORS, v.60, no.7, pp 1048 - 1072
Pages
25
Indexed
SCI
SCIE
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
HUMAN FACTORS
Volume
60
Number
7
Start Page
1048
End Page
1072
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/8949
DOI
10.1177/0018720818786132
ISSN
0018-7208
1547-8181
Abstract
Objective: This study reports current status of knowledge and challenges associated with the emergency vehicle (police car, fire truck, and ambulance) crashes, with respect to the major contributing risk factors. Background: Emergency vehicle crashes are a serious nationwide problem, causing injury and death to emergency responders and citizens. Understanding the underlying causes of these crashes is critical for establishing effective strategies for reducing the occurrence of similar incidents. Method: We reviewed the broader literature associated with the contributing factors for emergency vehicle crashes: peer-reviewed journal papers; and reports, policies, and manuals published by government agencies, universities, and research institutes. Results: Major risk factors for emergency vehicle crashes identified in this study were organized into four categories: driver, task, vehicle, and environmental factors. Also, current countermeasures and interventions to mitigate the hazards of emergency vehicle crashes were discussed, and new ideas for future studies were suggested. Conclusion: Risk factors, control measures, and knowledge gaps relevant to emergency vehicle crashes were presented. Six research concepts are offered for the human factors community to address. Among the topics are emergency vehicle driver risky behavior carryover between emergency response and return from a call, distraction in emergency vehicle driving, in-vehicle driver assistance technologies, vehicle red light running, and pedestrian crash control. Application: This information is helpful for emergency vehicle drivers, safety practitioners, public safety agencies, and research communities to mitigate crash risks. It also offers ideas for researchers to advance technologies and strategies to further emergency vehicle safety on the road.
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