Wounds and Injuries Clinical Trial
Official title:
Randomized Control Trial of an Intervention to Increase Perceived Safety Benefit of Booster Seats Among Parents of Children 4 to 8 Years Old in Canada.
| Verified date | November 2020 |
| Source | University of British Columbia |
| Contact | n/a |
| Is FDA regulated | No |
| Health authority | |
| Study type | Interventional |
Seat belts protect people from injuries by diverting crash forces to stronger anatomical structures: the rib cage and the pelvis. Children between the ages of 4 and 8 years are typically not tall enough to wear the seat belt correctly across the chest and hips, and instead wear it on their abdomen and neck. When worn in this way, seat belts direct crash forces to these parts of the body, potentially causing serious damage to internal organs and the spine. For this reason, children of these ages need to use a booster seat; a safety device that prevents seat belt related injuries by raising the child and ensuring the straps are correctly worn across the thorax and hips. In Canada, half of the children who should be using booster seats are prematurely restrained using only the seat belt. The present research project seeks to develop and test a novel intervention to encourage booster seat use. Many Canadian provinces have enacted laws mandating use, and have developed and implemented evidence-based education programs. Despite these efforts, new approaches to encourage booster seat use are required. In 2010, more than 10 years after booster seats became mandatory, the rate of utilization in the Canadian provinces of Ontario and Quebec was still low (25%). Furthermore, recent research indicates that parents' perception of the safety benefit of booster seats is the strongest predictor of use, yet no study to date has tested an education intervention that increases perceived benefit; instead, these interventions focus on teaching guidelines (i.e., minimum and maximum age, height, and weight to determine when a child should use a booster seat, and when it is safe for a child to use only the seat belt). The present approach to encouraging booster seat use is novel, because it increases perceived benefit by teaching two principles: (1) seat belts prevent injuries by redirecting crash forces to stronger parts of the body (rib cage and pelvis); and (2), without booster seats, children would wear the seat belt on their abdomen and neck, which directs crash forces to more vulnerable anatomical structures (internal organs and spine). Once parents grasp these two principles, they are expected to better appreciate the safety benefit of booster seats and, thus, be more likely to use them.
| Status | Completed |
| Enrollment | 731 |
| Est. completion date | December 28, 2018 |
| Est. primary completion date | December 28, 2018 |
| Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
| Gender | All |
| Age group | 18 Years to 60 Years |
| Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Parents of children 4 thorough 8 years old - Residing in any Canadian Province - Fluent in English - Drive with their child at least once a month Exclusion Criteria: - Child has a physical condition that requires special transportation |
| Country | Name | City | State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Canada | British Columbia Children's Hospital Research Institute | Vancouver | British Columbia |
| Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
|---|---|
| University of British Columbia | Child and Family Research Institute |
Canada,
A. W. Snowdon, A. Hussein, E. Ahmed, "Canadian National Survey on Child Restraint Use 2010" (AUTO21, 2011). https://www.tc.gc.ca/eng/motorvehiclesafety/resources-researchstats-child-restraint-survey-2010-1207.htm
Committee on Injury, Violence, and Poison Prevention, Durbin DR. Child passenger safety. Pediatrics. 2011 Apr;127(4):788-93. doi: 10.1542/peds.2011-0213. Epub 2011 Mar 21. — View Citation
Cunningham CE, Bruce BS, Snowdon AW, Chen Y, Kolga C, Piotrowski C, Warda L, Correale H, Clark E, Barwick M. Modeling improvements in booster seat use: a discrete choice conjoint experiment. Accid Anal Prev. 2011 Nov;43(6):1999-2009. doi: 10.1016/j.aap.2011.05.018. Epub 2011 Jun 25. — View Citation
Ishikawa T, Jiang A, Brussoni M, Reyna V, Weldon B, Bruce B, Pike I. Perceptions of injury risk associated with booster seats and seatbelts: the ejection stereotype hypothesis. Hypothesis Journal 15(1): e1.
| Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | Change in Perceived Safety Benefit of Booster Seats | Assessed with the Perceived Benefit sub-scale of the BSASabb (an abridged version of the Booster Seat Attitudes Scale, Cunningham et al., 2011). The Perceived Benefit subscale evaluates parents' perception of the general safety afforded by booster seats (e.g., prevents children from being injured during normal driving). The Perceived Benefit sub-scale of the BSASabb ranges from 1 to 5, and higher scores mean better outcome. | Immediately before intervention; immediately after intervention (the mean duration of the intervention was 3 minutes) | |
| Primary | Change in Key Benefit of Booster Seats | Change in key safety was measured as the difference between post- and pre-intervention scores assessed with the Key Benefit sub-scale of the BSASabb (an abridged version of the Booster Seat Attitudes Scale, Cunningham et al., 2011). The Key Benefit sub-scale evaluates parents' perception of the safety afforded by booster seats in relation to potentially fatal injuries to the spine and neck, a key feature of booster seats. The Key Benefit sub-scale of the BSASabb ranges from 1 to 5 and higher scores mean better outcome. | Immediately before intervention; immediately after intervention (the mean duration of the intervention was 3 minutes) | |
| Secondary | Change in Intention to Use Booster Seats | Change in intention to use booster seats was measured as the difference between post- and pre-intervention scores in the Intent to Use sub-scale of the BSASabb (an abridged version of the Booster Seat Attitudes Scale, Cunningham et al., 2011). Intent to Use sub-scale evaluates parents' willingness to purchase and ensuring their child always rides on a booster seat. The Intention to Use of the BSASabb ranges from 1 to 5 and higher scores mean better outcome. | Immediately before intervention; immediately after intervention (the mean duration of the intervention was 3 minutes) | |
| Secondary | General Knowledge of Booster Seats | Participants were asked questions to assess how much general information about booster seats they retained: how booster seats prevent injuries as well as guidelines and recommendations. Scores ranges from 0 to 2 and higher scores mean better outcome. | immediately after intervention (the mean duration of the intervention was 3 minutes) | |
| Secondary | Projected Intent to Use | Participants were asked to estimate how likely were their peers to use about booster seats, after reviewing the information they were assigned. The questionnaire was based on the Booster Seat Attitudes Scale (Cunningham et al., 2011). The idea behind this measure is that people judgments about what others would do reflect, in part, what they would do (Loewenstein, 2005). The scale ranges from 1 to 5 and higher scores mean better outcome. | Immediately after intervention (the mean duration of the intervention was 3 minutes) | |
| Secondary | Interest in the Communication Material | Number of seconds spent reviewing the material. | Immediately after intervention (the mean duration of the intervention was 3 minutes) | |
| Secondary | Interest in Additional Information | Whether parents review additional information offered as external links to legislation, car seat clinics, and list of product recalls. Measured as "Yes" or "No". | Immediately after intervention (the mean duration of the intervention was 3 minutes) | |
| Secondary | Applied Knowledge of Booster Seats | Participants were shown a picture of a child incorrectly restrained and were asked to identify the mistakes in the picture. Scores ranges from 0 to 3 and higher scores mean better outcome. | Immediately after intervention (the mean duration of the intervention was 3 minutes) | |
| Secondary | Projected Intent to Learn | Participants were asked to estimate how likely were their peers to learn about booster seats, after reviewing the information they were assigned. The questionnaire was based on the Booster Seat Attitudes Scale (Cunningham et al., 2011). The idea behind this measure is that people judgments about what others would do reflect, in part, what they would do (Loewenstein, 2005). The scale ranges from 1 to 5 and higher scores mean better outcome. | Immediately after intervention (the mean duration of the intervention was 3 minutes) |
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