Other formats:
BibTeX
LaTeX
RIS
@article{1766676, author = {Brázdil, Rudolf and Chromá, Kateřina and Dolák, Lukáš and Řehoř, Jan and Řezníčková, Ladislava and Zahradníček, Pavel and Dobrovolný, Petr}, article_number = {5}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/nhess-21-1355-2021}, keywords = {fatality; documentary data; statistical data; weather; fatality features; Czech Republic}, language = {eng}, issn = {1561-8633}, journal = {Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences}, title = {Fatalities associated with the severe weather conditions in the Czech Republic, 2000-2019}, url = {https://nhess.copernicus.org/articles/21/1355/2021/nhess-21-1355-2021.html}, volume = {21}, year = {2021} }
TY - JOUR ID - 1766676 AU - Brázdil, Rudolf - Chromá, Kateřina - Dolák, Lukáš - Řehoř, Jan - Řezníčková, Ladislava - Zahradníček, Pavel - Dobrovolný, Petr PY - 2021 TI - Fatalities associated with the severe weather conditions in the Czech Republic, 2000-2019 JF - Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences VL - 21 IS - 5 SP - 1355-1382 EP - 1355-1382 PB - Copernicus Publications SN - 15618633 KW - fatality KW - documentary data KW - statistical data KW - weather KW - fatality features KW - Czech Republic UR - https://nhess.copernicus.org/articles/21/1355/2021/nhess-21-1355-2021.html N2 - This paper presents an analysis of fatalities attributable to weather conditions in the Czech Republic during the 2000-2019 period. The database of fatalities deployed contains information extracted from Právo, a leading daily newspaper, and Novinky.cz, its internet equivalent, supplemented by a number of other documentary sources. The analysis is performed for floods, windstorms, convective storms, rain, snow, glaze ice, frost, heat, and fog. For each of them, the associated fatalities are investigated in terms of annual frequencies, trends, annual variation, spatial distribution, cause, type, place, and time as well as the sex, age, and behaviour of casualties. There were 1164 weather-related fatalities during the 2000–2019 study period, exhibiting a statistically significant falling trend. Those attributable to frost (31 %) predominated, followed by glaze ice, rain, and snow. Fatalities were at their maximum in January and December and at their minimum in April and September. Fatalities arising out of vehicle accidents (48 %) predominated in terms of structure, followed by freezing or hypothermia (30 %). Most deaths occurred during the night. Adults (65 %) and males (73 %) accounted for the majority of fatalities, while indirect fatalities were more frequent than direct ones (55 % to 45 %). Hazardous behaviour accounted for 76 %. According to the database of the Czech Statistical Office, deaths caused by exposure to excessive natural cold are markedly predominant among five selected groups of weather-related fatalities, and their numbers exhibit a statistically significant rise during 2000-2019. Police yearbooks of the fatalities arising out of vehicle accidents indicate significantly decreasing trends in the frequency of inclement weather patterns associated with fatal accidents as well as a decrease in their percentage in annual numbers of fatalities. The discussion of results includes the problems of data uncertainty, comparison of different data sources, and the broader context. ER -
BRÁZDIL, Rudolf, Kateřina CHROMÁ, Lukáš DOLÁK, Jan ŘEHOŘ, Ladislava ŘEZNÍČKOVÁ, Pavel ZAHRADNÍČEK and Petr DOBROVOLNÝ. Fatalities associated with the severe weather conditions in the Czech Republic, 2000-2019. \textit{Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences}. Copernicus Publications, 2021, vol.~21, No~5, p.~1355-1382. ISSN~1561-8633. Available from: https://dx.doi.org/10.5194/nhess-21-1355-2021.
|