Friday, November 28, 2025

Understanding Speed and the truth.

 

Road Safety Truth Sheet: Understanding Speed, Impact Forces, and Child Safety

Purpose:

To provide evidence-based, engineering-accurate information so policy decisions and public messaging reflect real-world causes of injury and death on our roads.


1. The Physics: Speed Alone Doesn’t Kill — Impact Forces Do

Injury and fatality occur when the human body experiences force, usually from:

  • Impact (sudden deceleration)

  • Crush forces (vehicle rolling over a person)

These forces—not “speed” as a number—cause physical harm.

Higher speed increases crash forces, but even low speeds can be lethal in run-over incidents due to vehicle weight and visibility limitations.


2. Why Low-Speed Run-Overs Kill Children

Child fatalities at low speeds usually involve:

  • A child being unseen by the driver

  • A vehicle reversing or moving slowly

  • The child being run over, causing fatal crush injuries

  • Large vehicle mass, high bonnet lines, and blind zones

These tragedies are visibility and design problems, not speed problems.


3. What “Speed Kills” Gets Right—and Wrong

Right:

  • Higher speeds significantly increase the risk and severity of road crashes.

  • Speed management is important on public roads.

Wrong (or incomplete):

  • It suggests speed is the sole cause of death.

  • It hides the role of visibility, road design, and vehicle engineering.

  • It fails to address low-speed driveway and parking-lot fatalities.

A more accurate public message is:

“Impact forces kill. Speed increases those forces, but vehicle design and visibility are critical for protecting children.”


4. Evidence-Based Policy Recommendations

A. For Public Roads

  • Set speed limits based on road design, not slogans.

  • Improve road design to reduce crash severity (narrow lanes, roundabouts, raised crossings).

  • Prioritise pedestrian-safe environments near schools and neighbourhoods.

B. For Driveways, Car Parks, and Residential Areas

Most child run-over deaths occur off public roads.

Key measures:

  • Mandatory front and rear automated emergency braking

  • 360° camera systems for new vehicles

  • Public education on blind zones around vehicles

  • Encourage driveway designs that separate play areas from vehicle paths

C. For Vehicles

  • Improve vehicle front-end visibility standards

  • Encourage lower bonnet heights where possible

  • Expand child-safety technology requirements


5. Why This Matters

Effective safety policy must reflect real-world human behaviour and accurate engineering principles.
Oversimplified slogans can unintentionally misdirect attention and resources.

When messaging and policy are aligned with truth, we get:

  • Fewer fatalities

  • Higher public trust

  • Better long-term safety outcomes

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