Monthly overview of crash statistics July 2009

Last updated on 20/08/2009 1:35 p.m. 

Download the monthly overview report of crash statistics for July 2009 (PDF v7.0, 150kb)

July Road Deaths (2009)

The data presented here are provisional. Crash data as at 10 August 2009.
  • Thirty-two people died on New Zealand roads in July. This is 11 more than the number of deaths for July 2008 and is two more than the average July toll for the last five years.  

Graph showing road deaths in the month of July from 1990 to 2009

  • To the end of July this year 246 people have died on New Zealand roads. This is 28 more than at the same time last year.
  • In the 12 months to the end of July 2009, 394 people were killed on our roads. This is six fewer than the number of deaths in the 12 months to the end of July 2008.
  • During July, 15 of the deaths were car or van drivers, six were car or van passengers, five were pedestrians, two were truck drivers, one was a motorcyclist, one was a cyclist, one was a bus passenger and one was on a mobility scooter.
  • Eighteen of the 32 killed were in open road crashes. Fifteen were in single vehicle crashes in which a driver lost control of the vehicle or ran off the road, seven were in head-on crashes and six were in pedestrian crashes.
  • Of the 24 vehicle occupants killed, seven were not restrained at the time of the crash.

Deaths and Police reported injuries by age, sex and type of road user

Deaths are for the 12 months to the end of July 2009. Reported injuries are for the 12 months to the end of January 2009.

Note: Preliminary fatal crash reports are submitted within 24 hours of a crash related death. Full injury crash reports are submitted only after the crash investigations are completed, so there is a lag in the reporting of injury crashes.

Road user type by sex

    Male     Female      Total       % male 
Drivers  Killed 

122 

66 

188 

65 

  Injured

4770 

3721 

8491 

56 

Passenger Killed 

62 

42 

104 

60 

  Injured

1499 

1794 

3293 

46 

Motorcyclists Killed 

51 

56 

91 

  Injured

1158 

257 

1415 

82 

Pedestrians Killed 

25 

31 

81 

  Injured

493 

441 

934 

53 

Cyclists         Killed 

11 

64 

  Injured

651 

243 

894 

73 

Other Killed

75 

  Injured

32 

13 

45 

71 

Total Killed 

270 

124 

394 

69 

  Injured

8603 

6469 

15072 

57 

Road user type by age group

Killed         

Age group

Drivers 

Passengers 

Motorcyclists 

Pedestrians 

Cyclists 

Other 

Total 

Under 15

14 

23 

15-24

46 

51 

10 

119 

25-34

31 

14 

15 

64 

35-44

22 

10 

42 

45-54

32 

14 

51 

55-64

19 

10 

40 

65-74

15 

22 

75+

21 

32 

Unknown

Total

188 

104 

56 

31 

11 

394 

 

Injured               
Age group  Drivers  Passengers  Motorcyclists  Pedestrians  Cyclists  Other  Total 
Under 15 

16 

572 

35 

216 

147 

10 

996 

15-24

2752 

1362 

434 

191 

177 

4923 

25-34

1528 

364 

242 

103 

131 

2371 

35-44

1402 

224 

291 

92 

166 

2177 

45-54

1165 

161 

264 

80 

126 

1796 

55-64

731 

147 

94 

47 

77 

1099 

65-74

412 

92 

25 

57 

21 

611 

75+

379 

85 

59 

13 

547 

Unknown

106 

286 

25 

89 

43 

552 

Total

8491 

3293 

1415 

934 

894 

45 

15072 

 

 
Graph showing deaths and reported injuries by age group to July 2009

Types of road users killed and injured to July 2009

Trends

Graph showing road crash casualties and vehicle fleet compared to 1990

 

Since 1990 the number of vehicles on the road has increased by 49% while Police reported injuries have dropped by 10%, road deaths have dropped by 48% and the number of days spent in hospital as a result of road crashes has dropped by 50%.

Crash outcomes and road user behaviour

Road crash data  2000  2001  2002  2003  2004  2005  2006  2007  2008  2009 
Deaths 
No of road deaths

  462

455 

405 

461 

435 

405 

393 

421 

366 

394 

Deaths per 10,000 vehicles

 1.8

1.7 

1.5 

1.6 

1.5 

1.3 

1.3 

1.3 

1.1 

1.2 

Deaths per 100,000 people

 12.1

11.8 

10.3 

11.5 

10.7 

9.9 

9.5 

10.0 

8.6 

9.2 

Injuries 
Reported injuries

10962 

12368 

13918 

14372 

13890 

14456 

15174 

16013 

15174 

15072 

No hospitalised (all discharges)

5990 

6700 

6530 

6540 

6580 

7210 

7680 

7440 

7490 

7509 

No hospitalised for over 1 day*

2846 

2880 

2750 

2720 

2710 

2860 

3020 

3060 

2880 

2853 

No hospitalised for over 3 days*

1815 

1794 

1740 

1700 

1700 

1840 

1900 

1990 

1880 

1862 

Behavioural measures 2000 2001 2002  2003  2004  2005  2006  2007  2008  2009 
Speed
Rural speed, % over 100km/h

52 

47 

43 

39 

39 

36 

32 

29 

30 

Rural speed, mean (km/h)

101.1 

100.2 

99.1 

98 

97.8 

97.1 

96.4 

96.3 

96.6 

Rural speed, 85th percentile (km/h)

111 

109 

107 

105 

105 

104 

103 

103 

103 

Alcohol
No of drivers killed with excess alcohol

58 

55 

60 

70 

69 

58 

54 

65 

59 

Percent of drivers killed with excess alcohol

21 

21 

24 

27 

27 

25 

24 

27 

28 

Occupant restraints

Seat belts worn by adults, front

90 

92 

92 

92 

94 

95 

95 

95 

95 

95 

Seat belts worn by adults, rear

76 

70 

78 

81 

86 

86 

89 

87 

87 

Children restrained, 0-14 years

87

89

94

96

97

94

96

94

97

97

Child restraints used, 0-4 years

79

82

86

86

87

89

91

91

90

-

Cycle helmets

Cycle helmets worn, week day

93

94

89

89

92

91

94

92

92

92

*Includes only the first stay in hospital

Note: Road deaths are for the 12 months to the end of July 2009. Reported injuries for 2009 are for the 12 months to the end of January 2009.

Factors contributing to crashes - ranked by social cost*

Graph showing factors contributing to crashes, ranked by social cost

Notes: Crash data for the 12 months to end of January 2009

Since there can be several contributing factors for a single crash the figures represented in this graph add to more than 100%.

*Social cost calculations include loss of life or life quality, loss of output due to injuries, medical and rehabilitation costs, legal and court costs and property damage.

Related: Crashes, Motorists, Land