Surgical News Volume 23 Issue 1

Page 28

28

Data – the key to meeting road safety targets Early last year, the Australian government consulted on a new National Road Safety Strategy aimed at reducing the approximately 1200 deaths and 40,000 serious injuries on the nation’s roads each year. The strategy for 2021-30 set targets to reduce these numbers over the next 10 years, setting us on the path to achieve Vision Zero (zero deaths and serious injuries) by 2050. The strategy includes 2030 targets of: • a 50 per cent reduction in fatalities— down to fewer than 571 (an approximate reduction in rate per capita of 55 per cent) • an interim 30 per cent reduction in serious injuries—down to fewer than 29,000 (an approximate reduction in rate per capita of 38 per cent). If 2021 is anything to go by, we are not going to meet those targets. We won’t even come close. As I write this in mid-December 2021, Australia has already surpassed the number of road deaths that we recorded in 2020. While comparisons are difficult given the impacts of COVID-19 and restricted movements, shockingly we are on target for a higher rate of fatalities in 2021 than we were in 2018. There was no COVID-19

then and movement was virtually unencumbered. We must do better. In 2021, the College responded to a draft of the National Road Safety Strategy, as well as separate road safety strategies in South Australia and Tasmania. In October 2021, I also wrote to both the Health Minister, the Hon. Greg Hunt and the Deputy Prime Minister and Assistant Minister for Road Safety & Freight Transport, the Hon Barnaby Joyce. In these letters, I provided the RACS Trauma Committee’s endorsement for the World Health Organization (WHO) and United Nations (UN) Global Plan Decade of Action for Road Safety 2021 – 2030. Similar to the Australian government’s plan, the WHO and the UN Global Plan sets a target to reduce road traffic deaths and injuries by at least 50 per cent over the next decade. While the WHO and the UN share a similar ambition to Australia’s national plan, where it differs is in its much greater prioritisation of data collections linkages. Unfortunately, in 2021, Australia did not have the quality of nationally aggregated road crash injury hospitalisation data delivered rapidly enough to effectively oversight road safety, and it does not look like this will improve any time soon.

Data collections and linkages play an integral role in policy development. We have seen firsthand how the collection and linkage of data during COVID-19 has assisted national governments to monitor and control the pandemic as best they could, and to maintain community awareness. The uptake of this information within the community demonstrates that the public has an appetite for, and an understanding of, information that affects the health of the nation. A similar approach for precise, consistent, and timely data collection and reporting of road trauma, including the numbers of road trauma patients in ICU beds, could easily be done. This would raise awareness of the costs of road trauma to families, the community, and the nation as a whole. If we are to come anywhere near meeting our targets, this is critical, and it is something the RACS Trauma Committee will continue to advocate for in the lead up to the federal election and beyond.

Dr John Crozier RACS Trauma Chair


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Articles inside

Research scholarship and grant opportunities for 2023

19min
pages 54-60

Cancer research more promising than ever

4min
pages 52-53

The Educator of Merit Award

4min
pages 50-51

Imitation - a sincere form of plagiarism

7min
pages 48-49

East Timor Eye Program evaluation

4min
pages 42-43

New professional development opportunties

1min
page 41

New Perioperative Mortality Committee for VASM

3min
page 36

Fellowship Services - supporting RACS Younger Fellows

6min
pages 38-39

Education activities

1min
page 40

Cosmetic surgery review underway

3min
page 37

Mt Gambier’s rural surgical team lead by example

6min
pages 34-35

Astley Cooper’s Illustrations of the Diseases of the Breast

6min
pages 32-33

Advocacy at RACS

3min
page 29

College publications making transition to digital

3min
page 31

November Annual Academic Surgery Conference highlights

2min
page 22

Developing a Career and Skills in Academic Surgery Course 2022

2min
page 23

A passion for rural medicine

7min
pages 26-27

Data - the key to meeting road safety targets

2min
page 28

Terminal care cases in the Australian and New Zealand Audit of Surgical Mortality

4min
pages 24-25

The Indigenous Trainee paving the way to Cardiothoracic surgery

3min
page 21

A tale of two surgeons

5min
pages 18-19

Fertility and pregnancy

3min
page 20

Outstanding work and research celebrated

7min
pages 16-17

New College name proposed

2min
page 11

President’s perspective

4min
pages 4-5

Examination update

1min
page 10

International Women’s Day event

2min
page 15

New role for trailblazing Orthopaedic surgeon

7min
pages 8-9

New beginnings - going it alone

5min
pages 12-14

Vice President’s message

6min
pages 6-7
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