Health Behavior Clinical Trial
Official title:
Young Driver Intervention Study: Preventing Motor Vehicle Crashes Among Young Drivers
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of a program designed to reduce teen crashes and risky driving by increasing parental monitoring and restriction of their adolescents' driving practices during the first year of licensed driving.
Motor vehicle crashes are the major cause of death and disability among adolescents from 16
through 20 years of age. While adolescents between the ages of 16 and 19 years constitute
only 5% of all licensed drivers, they are involved in 15% of the crashes in which they or
other occupants are killed. In fact, 16-year-old drivers are more than 20 times as likely to
have a crash as the general population of drivers and 17-year-olds are more than 6 times as
likely. In addition, for each adolescent motor vehicle fatality, approximately 100 nonfatal
injuries occur, making crashes the leading cause of disability due to head and spinal cord
injuries in adolescents.
Parents can have a huge impact on adolescent behavior. However, the impact of parenting
practices on adolescent driving behavior has not yet been examined. This study aims to
determine the efficacy of an intervention designed to increase parents' involvement in, and
parental restrictions on, their teens' early driving experiences in order to reduce the
number of tickets and crashes among teen drivers. The intervention provides educational
materials to parents and adolescents from the time the adolescent gets a learner's permit
through the first 6 months of licensure. These persuasive communications are tailored to
adolescents' level of driving experience. The intervention materials make explicit the
increased risk associated with adolescent driving and methods for reducing risk through
increased parental involvement in and restriction of driving.
Participants were recruited in the Connecticut Department of Motor Vehicle offices as
adolescents applied for their learner's permits. Participants were randomized to either the
intervention group or the control group. The control group received standard information
about driving not related to the specific teen risks focused on in the intervention group
materials. All participants completed interviews at study entry, licensure, 3 months after
licensure, 6 months after licensure, and 12 months after licensure. Parents were asked about
their expectations and parenting practices regarding their adolescents' driving behaviors.
Adolescents were asked about their driving practices and their parents' rules and
restrictions regarding driving. The driving records for each adolescent were obtained from
the state motor vehicle administration and examined 18 months after licensure.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Subject), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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