10 facts on global road safety
March 2013
About 1.24 million people die each year on the world's roads and between 20 and 50 million sustain non-fatal injuries. Young adults aged between 15 and 44 years account for 59% of global road traffic deaths.
This fact file presents data from the Global status report on road safety 2013. This is the second broad assessment of the road safety situation and provides the baseline for the Decade of Action for Road Safety 2011–2020. The report shows that road traffic injuries remain an important public health problem despite progress in a number of countries. To reduce the number of road traffic injuries, the pace of legislative change and enforcement need to be hastened and more attention paid to vulnerable road users, such as pedestrians, cyclists and motorcyclists.
Read the fact file on global road safety
Related links
Events
-
The 8th Global Conference on Health Promotion
10–14 June 2013
-
Sixty-sixth World Health Assembly
20–28 May 2013
Corporate resources
-
The world health report
Report on global public health and key statistics -
World health statistics report
WHO's annual compilation of data from its Member States -
International travel and health
Publication on travel risks, precautions and vaccination requirements -
International Health Regulations (IHR)
Global rules to enhance national, regional and global public health security