Effects of city-wide 20 mph (30km/hour) speed limits on road injuries in Bristol, UK

Author:

Bornioli AnnaORCID,Bray Isabelle,Pilkington Paul,Parkin John

Abstract

Twenty miles per hour (32 km/hour) or 30 km/hour speed limits represent a potential strategy to reduce urban road injuries and are becoming increasingly widespread. However, no study has conducted a robust evaluation of the effects of city-wide 20 mph speed limits on road injuries. This study reports the effects of such an intervention, based on a natural experiment that took place in Bristol, UK. Based on a stepped-wedge design using count data, negative binomial regressions showed that between 2008 and 2016, the 20 mph speed limit intervention was associated with a city-level reduction of fatal injuries of around 63% (95% CI 2% to 86%), controlling for trends over time and areas. There was also a general trend of reduction of the total number of injuries at city level and in 20 mph roads. These findings highlight the potential benefits of city-wide 20 mph speed limits. We hypothesise that this city-wide approach may encourage a general behaviour change in drivers that, in turn, may contribute to reducing injuries across the city.

Funder

Bristol City Council

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference14 articles.

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2. Pilkington P , Bornioli A , Bray I , et al . The Bristol twenty miles per hour limit evaluation (BRITE) study. University of the West of England, Bristol 2018.

3. Fridman L , Rothman L , Hagel B , et al . The effect of lowering residential speed limits to 30 km/h on child pedestrian injuries in Toronto, Canada. Injury Prevention 2018;24.

4. World Health Organisation . Global status report on road safety 2018 World Health Organisation; 2018.

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