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. 2021 Jun 15;18(12):6476. doi: 10.3390/ijerph18126476

Table 1.

Main characteristics of the selected studies.

- Author
- (Year of Publication)
- Study Area
- Study Design
- Study Period
- Length of Follow-Up
- Data Sources
- Study Populations
- Intervention and Comparison
- Outcome
- Measure of Effect
Main Result
(p Value or 95% Confidence Interval)
Quality Assessment
Sources of Bias
Schroer, B. J. & Peiton, W. P. (1978)
Huntsville (Alabama, USA)
Retrospective cohort study
April 1975 to December 1976
21 months

Linkage of pre-existing databases:
- Vehicles registered
- Vehicle inspected
- Road crashes
8494 inspected vehicles
30,089 non-inspected vehicles
Road crash rates (per vehicles)

Percent change
9.1% reduction in inspected vehicles
(one-tailed test: p < 0.05)
NOS 1: 7
Selection: 4
Comparability: 1
Outcome: 2

Secondary sources of information
Voluntary assignment of exposure High risk of confounding
White, W. T. (1985)
Levin township (New Zealand)
Retrospective cohort study
1980–1984
26 weeks

Linkage of pre-existing databases:
- Vehicles inspected
- Road crashes
9714 cars inspected;
5898 cars inspected at least twice
Road crash rates (per inspected cars)

Coefficient of the variable “weeks after the last inspection” in a Poisson regression model
0.028
(one-tailed test: p = 0.0002)
NOS 1: 6
Selection: 3
Comparability: 1
Outcome: 2

Secondary sources of information High risk of confounding
Fosser, S. (1992)
Norway
Randomized controlled trial
1986–1990
Three 1-year periods

Primary data about inspections
Data accidents (insurance companies)
204,000 vehicles, including vans and passenger cars

Three comparison groups:
(1) 4600 cars inspected annually between 1986 and 1988
(2) 4600 vehicles inspected once in 1986
(3) 112,000 non- inspected cars (Control group)
Road crash rates (per car-days)

Not estimated
No statistically significant differences between rates in the three groups Jadad scale 2: 2

Dropouts from scheduled interventions
No blinding
Blows, S. et al.
(2003)
Region of Auckland (New Zealand)
Prospective case–control study
March 1998 to July 1999

Face-to-face or telephone interviews
Cases: 571 hospitalized drivers of passenger cars, vans, and light industrial vehicles

Controls: 588 drivers of non-accident vehicles, obtained by random cluster sampling
Frequency of being in possession of a Warrant of Fitness or vehicle inspection certificate

Odds ratio
2.67
(1.46, 4.86)
NOS 1: 6
Selection: 4
Comparability: 2
Outcome: 0

Type of design (case–control)
Information (recall) bias
Residual confounding
Christensen, P. &Elvik, R. (2007)
Norway
Retrospective pre–post cohort study
1998–2005
Up to 5 years

Linkage of pre-existing databases:
-Inspections (public road administration)
- Crashes (insurance company)
253,098 passenger cars observed before and after one, two, or three inspections Road crash rates (per car)

Percent change
Vehicles with one inspection: +2.6%
(−0.7%, 6.0%)
Vehicles with two inspections: +8.4%
(3.9%, 13.2%)
Vehicles with three inspections: +4.0%
(−23.6%, 41.5%)
NOS 1: 5
Selection: 3
Comparability: 0
Outcome: 2

Type of design (pre–post)
Secondary sources of information High risk of confounding
Keall, M.D. & Newstead, S. (2013)
New Zealand
Retrospective cohort study
2003–2009
Up to 6 years

Linkage of pre-existing databases:
- Crash data
- Licensing data
- Inspection data
2,710,797 vehicle-years

Compare vehicles subject to annual inspections (aged 6 years or less) versus vehicles subject to 6-month inspections (aged 7 years or more)
Road crash rates (per vehicle-year)

Percent change
8% reduction in vehicles inspected every 6 months
(0.4%, 15%)
NOS 1: 6
Selection: 3
Comparability: 1
Outcome: 2

Secondary sources of information Risk of confounding

1 Newcastle-Ottawa scale for analytic observational studies [13]. 2 Jadad scale for experimental studies [14].