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Teen Drivers Pose Risk to Child Occupants
Researchers at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Find that Children
Transported by Teen Drivers are at a Much Higher Risk of Injury
February 3, 2005
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PHILADELPHIA
-- A national study of children in car crashes reports that children who
were driven by teenagers were three times as likely to have a serious
injury as those who were driven by adults. The risk was highest for
young teenaged passengers, those ages 13 to 15. According
to researchers from Partners for Child Passenger Safety (PCPS), a
research partnership of The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and
State Farm®, teen drivers were
more likely than adult drivers to be involved in more severe crashes and
less likely to have child passengers under age 9 years properly
restrained. The researchers propose modifying state licensing laws to
provide education and requirements that promote safer driving by
teenaged drivers. The
study, published in this month's issue of "Injury Prevention,"
looked at 19,111 children in 12,163 crashes reported to State Farm.
Overall, teenagers drove four percent of these children in crashes. When
a child was injured, however, teenagers were much more likely to be
driving - 12 percent of the injured children had a teen driver. These
children were not just their peers: 40 percent of teen-driven child
passengers were younger than 13 suggesting that teens regularly drive
younger children. "The
excess risk of injury to children in teen driver crashes can be
primarily explained by the more severe crashes those teen drivers
incurred," states Flaura Winston, MD, Ph.D., principal investigator
for Partners for Child Passenger Safety and the scientific director of
TraumaLink, a pediatric injury research center at Children's Hospital.
"The severity is likely a function of a teen driver's inexperienced
driving or risk-taking behavior and immaturity." Dr.
Winston and her colleagues also noted higher likelihood of no restraint
use and front row seating for child passengers who were driven by 15- to
17-year-old drivers. Children riding with these novice teen drivers were
3 times as likely to have no restraint at all as those with adult
drivers. Also, children under age 13 years riding with novice teen
drivers were more likely to sit in the front seat as compared to those
with adult drivers. "Parents
need to understand the excess risk of allowing their teens to drive
younger siblings," says Dr. Winston. "Parents should reinforce
over and over the importance of safe driving habits among their teens to
not only reduce their high crash rates but also to make sure that the
teen driver and the passengers are appropriately restrained on every
trip." Enhanced
public policy that includes child restraint and rear-seating
requirements in state graduated driver's licensing (GDL) programs could
provide teens with the necessary motivation to properly restrain all
child passengers. Nearly
all states have some form of a GDL law in an attempt to address the
persistent public health issue of teen driver crashes. Approximately 26
states have passenger restrictions during the intermediate licensing
stage to prevent or limit the number of teenaged passengers - a known
risk factor for teen crashes. All current passenger restrictions exempt
transporting family members. "Busy
parents have come to rely on their older children helping with shuttling
siblings to various commitments," says Dr. Winston. Rather than
restrict sibling passengers, Dr. Winston recommends GDL programs provide
appropriate education and disincentives, such as postponement of
full-driving privileges if all child passengers are not properly
restrained. Partners
for Child Passenger Safety is a research collaboration between The
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and State Farm. PCPS has created a
database containing information on more than 300,000 crashes involving
more than 453,000 children from birth through age 15 years. It is the
largest source of data on children in motor vehicle crashes. PCPS is
based at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and is funded by State
Farm. Co-authors of the study with Dr. Winston are PCPS researchers
Irene G. Chen, M.P.H., Dr.P.H.; Michael R. Elliot, Ph.D.; and Dennis R.
Durbin, M.D., M.S.C.E. Founded in 1855 as the nation's first pediatric hospital, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia is ranked today as the best pediatric hospital in the nation by U.S.News & World Report and Child magazines.
Source: The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
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