Injury Prevention, volume 29, issue 3, pages ip-2022-044704

Addressing discrepancies in estimates of road traffic deaths and injuries in Ethiopia

Kazuyuki Neki 1
Hialy Gutierrez 2, 3
Sudeshna Mitra 1
Awoke M Temesgen 4
Leah Watetu Mbugua 1
Ramshankar Balasubramaniyan 2, 3
Mercer Winer 2, 3
Jaeda Roberts 2, 3
Theo Vos 4
Erin Hamilton 4
James E. Harrison 5, 6
Soames Job 1
K.S. Bhalla 2, 3
Show full list: 14 authors
1
 
World Bank Global Road Safety Facility
2
 
Public Health Sciences
4
 
Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation
5
 
Research Center for Injury Studies
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2022-12-05
BMJ
BMJ
scimago Q1
SJR0.898
CiteScore5.3
Impact factor2.5
ISSN13538047, 14755785
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Abstract
Background

There are large discrepancies between official statistics of traffic injuries in African countries and estimates from the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) study and WHO’s Global Status Reports on Road Safety (GSRRS). We sought to assess the magnitude of the discrepancy in Ethiopia, its implications and how it can be addressed.

Methods

We systematically searched for nationally representative epidemiological data sources for road traffic injuries and vehicle ownership in Ethiopia and compared estimates with those from GBD and GSRRS.

Findings

GBD and GSRRS estimates vary substantially across revisions and across projects. GSRRS-2018 estimates of deaths (27 326 in 2016) are more than three times GBD-2019 estimates (8718), and these estimates have non-overlapping uncertainty ranges. GSRRS estimates align well with the 2016 Demographic and Health Survey (DHS-2016; 27 838 deaths, 95th CI: 15 938 to 39 738). Official statistics are much lower (5118 deaths in 2018) than all estimates. GBD-2019 estimates of serious non-fatal injuries are consistent with DHS-2016 estimates (106 050 injuries, 95th CI: 81 728 to 130 372) and older estimates from the 2003 World Health Survey. Data from five surveys confirm that vehicle ownership levels in Ethiopia are much lower than in other countries in the region.

Interpretation

Inclusion of data from national health surveys in GBD and GSRRS can help reduce discrepancies in estimates of deaths and support their use in highlighting under-reporting in official statistics and advocating for better prioritisation of road safety in the national policy agenda. GBD methods for estimating serious non-fatal injuries should be strengthened to allow monitoring progress towards Sustainable Development Goal target 3.6.

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