Friday, November 12, 2021

You May Actually Be Alive Thanks to Covid 19 Pandemic

As Road Safety Week Opens a Pause for Thought
Shipping News Feature

UK – The tragedy which is Covid 19 may have brought misery to the doors of many but it seems there are numerous lives which it has inadvertently saved, belonging to people none of whom will ever know they actually dodged a bullet.

According to road safety charity Brake statistics, the lockdown in 2020, and the resultant reduced traffic levels on Britain's roads, meant deaths and serious injuries on the streets dropped by a fifth, the first decline in years.

The analysis comes as we are about to enter Road Safety Week (15–21 November) and Brake says the statistics should encourage everybody to make renewed efforts to ensure roads are safer in the future for all of us.

About 300 deaths and more than 6,000 serious injuries were prevented due to lighter traffic in 2020, compared with 2019. Road deaths and serious injuries declined across Britain, with the biggest drops in numbers seen in Scotland, followed by Wales, South West England, and London. Areas with the biggest reductions in those killed or seriously injured in percentage terms were Scotland, followed by Yorkshire and the Humber, North East England and the East of England.

There were, however, still 1,460 deaths and more than 22,000 serious injuries on roads in 2020, causing devastation to families across the country. Across the country, South East England was the only region to see an increase in deaths last year 239, up from 214 in 2019 and an increase of 12 %. Jason Wakeford, Head of Campaigns at Brake, said:

”Reductions in the number of people killed or seriously injured on the roads due to lockdown restrictions last year are to be welcomed but should also inspire more action to make roads safer as traffic returns to pre-pandemic levels. Road Safety Week is the UK’s biggest annual road safety campaign and is a great opportunity to speak up for road safety.

”This year everyone can acknowledge and celebrate the heroic efforts of people working to save lives on roads across the country, and recognise that we can all be road safety heroes by using roads safely and taking actions for road safety in our families, schools, communities and where we work. We would urge everyone to visit the Road Safety Week website for loads of ways to take part in the campaign all this week.”

As traffic levels rise again, Road Safety Week is celebrating the work of road safety heroes across the country who are working to tackle deaths and serious injuries and turn the one-year drop into a downward trend, including Government plans for a new road safety strategy: local authorities building cycle paths; companies working to ensure they use vehicles safely; and communities working for changes where they live, such as 20mph speed limits.

This year’s campaign also celebrates the invaluable efforts of the emergency services, including those who police the roads and save lives, at the roadside and in hospitals, and the work of the National Road Victim Service, caring for the emotional and practical needs of road victim families, as well as community services including mental health services and disability and peer support charities.

Brake, which co-ordinates the annual campaign, is calling for individuals, communities and organisations to share stories of their own road safety heroes, through social media, in schools, in company team meetings or special events. Transport Secretary Grant Shapps commented:

“While the UK has some of the safest roads in the world, we’re always working to make them even safer, and we very much welcome the drop in casualties during the pandemic. We will continue to work tirelessly to help see further reductions, including through our THINK! campaign, which tackles behaviours that can lead to serious road incidents and our ongoing review of roads policing.”