Influences on youthful driving behavior and their potential for guiding interventions to reduce crashes
- 20 June 2006
- journal article
- review article
- Published by BMJ in Injury Prevention
- Vol. 12 (suppl 1) , i9-i14
- https://doi.org/10.1136/ip.2006.011874
Abstract
This paper presents an organized, comprehensive view of the factors known to influence young drivers’ behavior and how those factors might inform interventions to reduce crashes. This effort was done from the perspective of a public health professional, with a background in health behavior and health education, interested in preventing injury and death among young people from motor vehicle crashes. The author’s own studies, selected relevant literature, observation, and experience were considered and organized. A framework of six categories of influences on youthful driving behavior was developed, including the following elements: driving ability, developmental factors, personality factors, demographics, the perceived environment, and the driving environment. It is apparent that a complex set of many different factors influences young drivers’ behavior. To reduce crashes, comprehensive, multilevel interventions are needed that target those factors in the framework that are amenable to change.Keywords
This publication has 42 references indexed in Scilit:
- Patterns of Traffic Offenses from Adolescent Licensure into Early Young AdulthoodJournal of Adolescent Health, 2006
- The safety value of driver education an trainingInjury Prevention, 2002
- Rationale for graduated licensing and the risks it should addressInjury Prevention, 2002
- Use of a Fixed-Base Driving Simulator to Evaluate the Effects of Experience and PC-Based Risk Awareness Training on Drivers' DecisionsHuman Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, 2002
- Drinking-driving as a component of problem driving and problem behavior in young adults.Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 2002
- Initial Effects of Graduated Driver Licensing on 16-Year-Old Driver Crashes in North CarolinaJAMA, 2001
- Adolescent antecedents of high-risk driving behavior into young adulthood: substance use and parental influencesAccident Analysis & Prevention, 2001
- Long-Term Follow-Up of a High School Alcohol Misuse Prevention Program???s Effect on Students??? Subsequent DrivingAlcohol, Clinical and Experimental Research, 2001
- Relationship of parent driving records to the driving records of their childrenAccident Analysis & Prevention, 2001
- Alcohol-related relative risk of driver fatalities and driver involvement in fatal crashes in relation to driver age and gender: an update using 1996 data.Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 2000