Abstract:
Road traffic accidents and injuries have now emerged as a serious man-made epidemic
with an estimated 1.3 million people killed and as many as 50 million injured worldwide
each year. It is a rear event that road accidents accrue from a single cause. There are
usually a myriad of causative factors that might have caused a road accident at any given
point of time. Researchers estimated that around 90% of all causative factors involve road
users of which drivers are the principal controlling elements. Accidents are particularly
prevalent in low and middle income countries- around 85 percent of the world’s deaths
occur in developing countries like Bangladesh. Traffic accidents in Bangladesh have been
increasing rapidly causing a huge amount of economic burden in terms of death, injury,
lost productivity and property damage. Pedestrian-vehicle conflicts are clearly the
greatest problem with significant involvement of Trucks and Buses. Licensed driving
remains a serious problem for road safety, despite ongoing improvements in traffic law
enforcement practice and technology. While it does not play a direct causative role in
road crashes, licensed driving undermines the integrity of the driver licensing system and
is associated with high risk behavior. Drivers are classified into three groups: (a) took no
test; (b) took some tests; (c) took all tests. This thesis documents three groups that were
undertaken to explore the scope and nature of licensed driving, in order to develop more
effective countermeasures to the behavior and attitude. The need for more systemic
behavioral studies seems apparent, particularly to develop a factual and comprehensive
database for devising effective accident countermeasure. In order to gather factual
information to serve as a basis for this study, a well-conceived questionnaire survey was
conducted on the attitude and behavior of heavy vehicles drivers. The research also
investigates the knowledge of the drivers about the Traffic rules and inspects the
condition of the vehicles. Considering all the facts of involvement of heavy vehicles
(buses and trucks) driver and compare among the heavy vehicle drivers to explain the
attitude, behaviors of license drivers; discusses the possible solutions to improve the
continuously deteriorating situation. The study focuses on the striking findings of the
research with a view to assessing the need for taking appropriate countermeasures for
improving driver behavior and hence reducing road accidents in Bangladesh
Description:
Supervised by
Dr. Shakil Mohammad Rifaat,
Assistant Professor,
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering (CEE),
Islamic University Of Technology (IUT),
Board Bazar, Gazipur-1704, Bangladesh.