Too much safety makes Japanese a sheltered lot
Straits Times,-Singapore-27 Aug
... another source of disbelief for non-natives. 'I never want to be in an accident in Japan. I would die before the ambulance crew ...
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'I never want to be in an accident in Japan. I would die before the ambulance crew reached me,' said Mr Kerry Liu, a 28-year-old Australian who has lived, unscathed, in Tokyo for three years.
Steve Bildermann wrote:
This leads to some interesting (read inane) court decisions about traffic fatalities.
kamome wrote:Steve Bildermann wrote:
This leads to some interesting (read inane) court decisions about traffic fatalities.
So then what are those signs in front of every koban that list the traffic fatalities? Are they actually referring to those who died at the hospital or at the scene? Or both?
Captain Japan wrote:kamome wrote:So then what are those signs in front of every koban that list the traffic fatalities? Are they actually referring to those who died at the hospital or at the scene? Or both?
Yeah, I've wondered about those koban stats as well. I'm not sure but I think in order to be considered a traffic death you have to die within a pretty low amount of hours (something around 24) of the accident.
JAMA wrote:According to the National Police Agency, the number of fatalities due to traffic accidents (those who died from accidents within 24 hours) in 1999 was 9,005 persons, a decline of 206 persons (2.2%) from the previous year.
-- JAMA http://www.jicosh.gr.jp/english/statistics/1999traffic/
BusinessWeek wrote:]To put this number in perspective, Japan's suicide victims number three times the nation's traffic fatalities.
--Japanese Way of Death
By Brian Bremner BusinessWeek http://www2.gol.com/users/coynerhm/japanese_way_of_death.htm
August 22, 2000
Taro Toporific wrote:JAMA wrote:the number of fatalities due to traffic accidents in 1999 was 9,005 personsBusinessWeek wrote:]To put this number in perspective, Japan's suicide victims number three times the nation's traffic fatalities.
kamome wrote:BusinessWeek wrote:To put this number in perspective, Japan's suicide victims number three times the nation's traffic fatalities.
27,000 suicide deaths in Japan in a year is pretty damn high. Next question: was it mostly by train jumping?
Taro Toporific wrote:Karoshi?
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