“FLASH FOR LIFE”: COMMUNITY‐BASED PROMPTING FOR SAFETY BELT PROMOTION

Abstract
A community-based strategy for promoting safety belt use was field-tested in two adjacent rural communities, one populated by a preponderance of students, faculty, and staff of a major university. The intervention involved the front-seat passenger of a stopped vehicle displaying to the driver of an adjacent, stopped vehicle an 11 × 14 inch flash card that read, “PLEASE BUCKLE UP—I CARE.” If the driver buckled up, the “flasher” flipped over the card and displayed the message, “THANK YOU.” This flash card was shown to 1,087 unbuckled drivers; 82% of these drivers looked at the flash card and 22% of these complied with the buckle-up request. Compliance was not influenced by the age or gender of the “flasher” (young child vs. college student), nor by the gender of the driver; but significantly more drivers in the university town buckled up following the flash card presentation (25% mean compliance in the college town vs. 14% in the other community). To date, over 2,000 individuals have received a buckle-up flash card for their own use.

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