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Accident rates and the impact of daylight saving time transitions.
Accid Anal Prev. 2018 Feb; 111:193-201.AA

Abstract

One-third of nations have adopted some form of Daylight Saving Time (DST). Associated costs and benefits include impacts on accident rates. Using data from 12.6 million accident claims in New Zealand during 2005-2016, we model accident rates as a function of various date-based predictors including days before/after the start and end of DST, holidays, day of week, and month of year. This is the first study to consider multiple accident categories (Road, Work, Falls and Home & Community), and the first in the southern hemisphere. The start of DST is associated with significantly higher rates of road accidents (first day +16% and second day +12%). Evidence that accident rates for Falls and Home & Community decline (increase) prior to the start (end) of DST suggest potential behavioural adaption from anticipating the change. While Work accidents show limited impact from DST changes, they exhibit a significant decline over the course of the week (Friday 13% lower than Monday), whereas Road accidents exhibit a significant increase (Friday 19% higher than Monday). Our results have implications for both DST implementation and policy.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Graduate School of Management, The University of Auckland Business School, Private Bag 92019, Auckland, 1142, New Zealand. Electronic address: d.robb@auckland.ac.nz.Apt 317 Railway Station Apartments, Te Taou Crescent, Auckland, 1010, New Zealand.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

29223028

Citation

Robb, David, and Thomas Barnes. "Accident Rates and the Impact of Daylight Saving Time Transitions." Accident; Analysis and Prevention, vol. 111, 2018, pp. 193-201.
Robb D, Barnes T. Accident rates and the impact of daylight saving time transitions. Accid Anal Prev. 2018;111:193-201.
Robb, D., & Barnes, T. (2018). Accident rates and the impact of daylight saving time transitions. Accident; Analysis and Prevention, 111, 193-201. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aap.2017.11.029
Robb D, Barnes T. Accident Rates and the Impact of Daylight Saving Time Transitions. Accid Anal Prev. 2018;111:193-201. PubMed PMID: 29223028.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Accident rates and the impact of daylight saving time transitions. AU - Robb,David, AU - Barnes,Thomas, Y1 - 2017/12/07/ PY - 2017/04/26/received PY - 2017/09/22/revised PY - 2017/11/22/accepted PY - 2017/12/10/pubmed PY - 2018/6/15/medline PY - 2017/12/10/entrez KW - Anticipatory effects KW - Day of week effects KW - Daylight saving time KW - Falls KW - Holiday effects KW - Road accidents KW - Work accidents SP - 193 EP - 201 JF - Accident; analysis and prevention JO - Accid Anal Prev VL - 111 N2 - One-third of nations have adopted some form of Daylight Saving Time (DST). Associated costs and benefits include impacts on accident rates. Using data from 12.6 million accident claims in New Zealand during 2005-2016, we model accident rates as a function of various date-based predictors including days before/after the start and end of DST, holidays, day of week, and month of year. This is the first study to consider multiple accident categories (Road, Work, Falls and Home & Community), and the first in the southern hemisphere. The start of DST is associated with significantly higher rates of road accidents (first day +16% and second day +12%). Evidence that accident rates for Falls and Home & Community decline (increase) prior to the start (end) of DST suggest potential behavioural adaption from anticipating the change. While Work accidents show limited impact from DST changes, they exhibit a significant decline over the course of the week (Friday 13% lower than Monday), whereas Road accidents exhibit a significant increase (Friday 19% higher than Monday). Our results have implications for both DST implementation and policy. SN - 1879-2057 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/29223028/Accident_rates_and_the_impact_of_daylight_saving_time_transitions_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -