Factors That Affect Traffic
Accidents
Traffic accidents refer to vehicles colliding with another vehicle, a pedestrian, an animal, or a geographical
or architectural obstacle.
In 2008 alone, there were 43,313 fatalities were reported in the United States.
Traffic accidents can either lead to injuries, fatalities, property damage or all of the mentioned results.
There are three possible factors that could lead to a traffic collision, those are:
• Driver behavior
• Road design
• Vehicle design and maintenance
Driver Behavior
Driver behavior has been the leading cause of traffic accidents in the United States. Different negligent acts
like drunk-driving, speeding and reckless driving has led to numerous tragedies on the road.
A speed research documented by the US Department of Transportation’s Federal Highway Administration, reviews the
different effects of speeding to a vehicle and the driver.
Here is a summary of the findings:
• The risk of having a crash increases for both vehicles travelling slower than the average speed and those
driving above the average speed.
• The risk of injury increases with speeds higher than the median speed.
• The amount of damage in a crash depends on the speed change of the vehicle upon impact.
• Evidence suggests that lower speed limits results in lower speeds on a system wide basis.
• Most crashes related to speed involves vehicles moving too fast for the current conditions (road,
weather).
Aside from speeding, DUI is another driver behavior that usually leads to a traffic accident.
According to studies:
• DUI is the leading cause of traffic accidents in the US. In fact, it accounts for about 41 percent of all
fatalities that is related to traffic accidents.
• Half of all holiday traffic accidents are DUI related.
• Most people who are caught for DUI are not even alcoholics.
• About 30 percent of all Americans will be involved in an alcohol related traffic accident sometime during
their lifetime.
Road Design
A US study shows that roadways or its environment are contributing factors in about 34% of all traffic accidents
although most of them are also caused by human factors.
Road or environment factors may refer to a sudden turn that can cause a vehicle to turn over, or a narrow road
that leaves little room for a driver to recover.
Research has shown that careful design and maintenance which includes well designed intersections, road
surfaces, visibility, and traffic control devices, should result in the decrease of traffic accident rates.
Vehicle Design and Maintenance
A vehicle with a good design and is well maintained is more controllable in case of emergency and is much more
likely to avoid a collision or lessen the impact.
The designs of vehicles in terms of safety have also improved as driven by competition between competing brands.
Some of the safety features that have been developed through the years are seatbelts, airbags and safety cages.
However, there is also a rise on the number of rollovers because of the increasing popularity of SUVs.
SUVs, people carriers and minivans all have a higher center of gravity compared to a normal sedan which
increases the possibility of rollover.
SUV manufacturers are currently working on designing SUVs that would lessen the risk of rollovers.
Cause and Contributing Factors in Traffic Accidents
When the facts are against you, argue the law;
When the law is against you, argue the facts.
The above is often quoted to aspiring attorneys. To successfully argue the facts of a case, the advocate must
understand their contribution to the proximate cause of an issue and the factors leading to a result. This is one
reason there are expert witnesses. Few trials would be complete without expert testimony.
The ultimate goal of a traffic accident investigation or reconstruction is to determine the events of the
accident, or what caused the accident. There are many publications available on the subject of cause as cause is
the heart of the issue at trial. The subject matter can be complex since there are so many circumstances and
factors that must be considered in a cause analysis. There is also the matter of what does "cause" mean?
One pitfall a reconstructionist, or an attorney, faces is defining "cause." As most of the reconstructionist's
work involves the legal profession, a common understanding of the legal term will be useful to prevent
confusion.
Cause in law is different from cause in the rest of the world. In the eyes of the courts, cause is an issue of
policy and not an instrument of factual analysis. The issue for the court is whether, as a policy decision, a
defendant should be held liable for injuries or damages. In a traffic accident case, the resolution of that issue
depends on whether the crash was a foreseeable result of a defendant's negligence or willful act.
This sounds contrary to that which is taught to police officers, traffic homicide investigators and accident
reconstructionists. The work of the accident investigator is preliminary to the analysis performed by the jury. The
jury is bound to consider the evidence and will consider the quality and completeness of the analyst's presentation
in coming to a conclusion. Put another way, the juror is not constrained to the same principles of factual analysis
as is the investigator.
Many jurisdictions hold that any event that was a substantial factor in causing a harmful event is a legally
relevant proximate cause of the event even if other things were also substantial factors and therefore concurring
proximate causes of that event. This does not mean a law violation must be construed as a causative factor in an
accident. For example, a vehicle's registration may have expired but this would not be relative to the vehicle
being involved in a collision although it is a violation. Many traffic laws exist solely to govern the safe
movement of traffic on the highways; stop signs, lane division, speed limits, etc., and may concur with an accident
factor that existed. For the police officer, it is convenient to match a law violation with a "cause" but this
practice often results in errors as it tends to ignore other existing factors that may have been present and were
equally contributing to an accident.
A common law violation that is considered a modifier of the human factor is intoxication. Assume a vehicle is
stopped at a stop sign. The driver is legally intoxicated. His car is struck in the rear end by another vehicle.
The fact that the driver of the lead vehicle is intoxicated is not a factor in this accident but the law violation
is present. His performance did not contribute to the event. When determining intoxication as a factor in an
accident, the effect of the level of intoxication in the human performance factor needs to be quantified. For
example, if a driver was not intoxicated, would the accident still have occurred?
Outside the courtroom and in factual analysis, cause is whatever is required to produce a result. A case
normally consists of a combination of factors, circumstances or conditions that must be present to produce the
result. Consider a cigarette lighter. For a flame to be produced, there must be fuel, a flint, a striking surface
this is free of moisture and someone to actuate the mechanism. Take out any of these circumstances and the lighter
will not produce a flame. Not only must these circumstances be present, they must be present simultaneously. In
this example, it is a simple matter to find one circumstance that must be present to produce the result, such as
the fuel, but in other situations the factors may be difficult to identify.
When circumstances or conditions exist simultaneously, the degree of each condition may be important. Consider
two drivers, Smith and Jones. Smith, with better visual acuity, can see better in dim light than Jones. Driving
along a dark country road, without headlights, neither driver can see a pedestrian walking along the side of the
road. With high beam headlights, both Smith and Jones can see the pedestrian. With low beam headlights, Smith can
see the pedestrian but not Jones. High beams allow Jones, even with his poorer visual capacity, to see the
pedestrian as can Smith. But Jones cannot see as well as Smith under the same circumstances even though the
environmental conditions were identical. An analysis of an accident involving Jones and the pedestrian would
include trying to determine whether it was due to poor visual acuity or insufficient lighting conditions. If three
or more conditions interrelate, the evaluation of the circumstances becomes considerably more complex.
Conditions and events are closely interrelated when considering accident factors. Some may be obvious and others
difficult to determine. If a large truck is involved in an accident and the fuel tank is ruptured, the cause of the
rupture and resulting fuel spill, is readily determined. If the fuel was to ignite, the cause of the ignition may
be indeterminate but subject to speculation.
A "factor" is a circumstance contributing to a result. Without this factor, the result would not exist but the
factor alone is an element that, by itself, cannot produce the result. The term "contributing factor" is
meaningless if this definition is accepted. A factor must be contributing if it is present otherwise it is not a
factor. The term "primary factor" is sometimes used by experts to indicate a factor that was strong in its
contribution to the accident. This is misleading as there can be no one factor more important than any other if all
factors must have been present to produce a result. No factor can be secondary, or less important than another if
all are required for the result. Like the links of a chain, all must be present and none is more or less necessary
than the other.
Consider a road with a sharp curve. One year, 10,000 cars safely negotiate the curve. During the same year, 50
cars failed to negotiate the curve and crashed. What was the cause of the accidents? If it is accepted that the
sharp curve was the cause, then all the cars traveling on this road would have had an accident. It may well be a
factor, but certainly not the sole circumstance in existence that precipitated the accidents. A combination of
factors, speed, driver capability, vehicle condition and environmental conditions all come into play.
In a two car head-on collision, multiple factors again come into focus. Why was one driver left of center? Was
it a problem of perception? Or attitude? Why did the other driver not take evasive action? Did a passenger not warn
the driver of the impending hazard? Is there road design defect? A failure to properly mark, sign or maintain the
road? Obviously, many questions are not addressed and will not be answered by a police officer filling in blocks on
a standard accident report form.
Actors fall into three primary areas: road, vehicle and human. Each area is subject to a variety of modifiers.
For instance, road factors include, but are not limited to lighting, view obstructions, recognizability, signs,
signals, surface character, dimensions and protective devices. All factors are subject to modification by outside
influences such as the road surface that becomes slick from rainfall. Modifying each of the listed road factors are
weather, lighting, roadside devices, activities, surface deposits, damage, deterioration and age.
For vehicles, factors include equipment condition, view obstructions, distractions, instruments, signaling
devices, control sensation, comfort, automatic controls and devices, weight, performance, dimensions and stability.
Vehicle speed, as a factor, must exist. If neither vehicle had any speed, there could not have been a
collision.
Human factors are without doubt the most complex and difficult to isolate as they are almost all very temporary
in nature. What existed at the time of the accident may not exist moments later. Consider sensory capabilities,
knowledge, judgment, attitude, alertness, health, driving skill, age, customs, habits, weight, strength and freedom
of movement. Of these, the emotional factors are the greatest variable attributes and the most difficult to
identify. They are also subject to the most modification with the least remaining evidence.
Remote condition factors may be considered when dealing with cause analysis although they are seldom of
significance to the investigator on a single accident case. Remote condition factors may involve a changing
cultural climate in which the factors and their modifiers form. This includes moral influences, religion, beliefs,
legal influence and values on vehicle designers, highway engineers, drivers and pedestrians.
In most reconstructions preformed for civil litigation, collision avoidance is an issue. Much of this analysis
falls under a category of predisposing circumstances. Some of these circumstances can be controlled by the
individual. In small amounts, alcohol in the bloodstream may have little effect on a driver's capabilities. In
larger quantities, the effect can be dramatic and greatly increase the chances of an accident. A driver may be
exposed to a predisposing circumstance, such as consuming moderate amounts of alcohol before driving for many years
and never have an accident. It is only when this circumstance is combined with other circumstances that the full
effect of the predisposing circumstance becomes evident. Other predisposing circumstances, like driving in a
rainstorm, can be avoided by trip planning.
Determining all the factors that were present in any single accident would be a monumental undertaking. With
human foibles, none will ever be complete or accurate. There are simply too many factors, modifiers and
circumstances present that may have disappeared long before the investigator becomes involved. Other circumstances
may simply never be revealed, or realized, by the parties involved. The examination of many accidents at one
location may reveal a single, unique circumstance common to all accidents there. This is useful in isolating a
factor not readily observable in a single case.
The essential test for proximate cause is the accident must be the natural and probable result of a negligent
act or omission and be of such a character as an ordinarily prudent person ought to have foreseen it as likely to
occur as a result of the action. It is not essential that the person charged with the negligence should have
foreseen the precise injury from his action.
This definition makes the work of the accident analyst and advocate easier in that not all the factors present
in an accident may be sufficiently relevant to the cause for consideration. Mere presence is insufficient, it must
have in some significant way contributed to the result. As such, there are several factors that are routinely
identified as being substantially contributing and others are accepted or implied as being present and normally
expected. In a case where a vehicle falls or flips, gravity is a factor and its existence is accepted. This does
not relieve the analyst of the responsibility of being aware of the presence of additional factors because in any
case any one of them may be critical in determining proximate cause.
With a good understanding of the relationships of accident factors, circumstances and modifiers, and sufficient
data, an accident can be analyzed, causation determined and the conclusions effectively presented.

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