Trauma Clinical Trial
Official title:
Teenage Driving Safety Study: An Emergency Medicine-Trauma Collaborative Study
Teenage driving safety continues to be a major public health issue. Two factors have been
found to contribute to a higher teenage driving accident rate than adults: lack of driving
experience, and risky behaviors. Insufficient driving experience puts teenagers at a
disadvantage in detecting and responding to hazards while driving. Factors contributing to
distracted driving (a diversion in the driver's attention from the road) may include:
talking or text messaging on a cell phone, applying makeup, having multiple passengers,
listening to loud music, eating/drinking, smoking or reading while driving.
This is a prospective study designed to evaluate the effect of an educational program on the
risks associated with distracted driving for teenage drivers. The researchers will compare
cell phone usage behaviors in Pennsylvania, where no cell phone laws are in place, and New
Jersey, where cell phone laws exist, and will educate the beginner driver on the potential
dangers associated with driving without a seat belt, substance use, and participating in
distracting driving behaviors. Knowledge of state laws will also be assessed.
Objectives
1. Educate participants on the potential dangers of distracted driving.
2. Evaluate the impact of the educational program on teenage distracted driving behaviors
by obtaining and analyzing information from student surveys, state law quizzes, and
anonymous observation, pre, post, and delayed post education.
3. Quantify distracted driving behavior in teenage driver's attending local area high
schools by obtaining and analyzing information from student surveys, state law quizzes,
and anonymous observation, pre, post, and delayed post education.
4. Qualify distracted driving behavior in teenage driver's attending local area high
schools by obtaining and analyzing information from student surveys, anonymous
observation, and anonymous voicemails, text messages, and/or emails pre, post, and
delayed post education.
Qualify distracted driving behavior in adults through anonymous observations near local area
high schools.
6. Compare teenage driving behaviors as reported and observed between Pennsylvania and New
Jersey.
7. Compare seat belt usage, driving behaviors, and substance use in the study population to
the state and national averages pre and post education.
8. Compare averages of student's knowledge of state driving laws pre and post education.
Within the 2007-2008 school year, Phillipsburg High School in Phillipsburg, New Jersey, and
Southern Lehigh High School in Center Valley, Pennsylvania have agreed to take part in an
educational program targeting high school students on the risks associated with distracted
driving behaviors. The educational program will be approximately 60-minutes in length
utilizing education material including but not limited to: a 5-10 minute DVD illustrating a
teenager's real-life experience of the devastating effects of distracted driving, other
videos placing the viewer in the driver's seat, power point presentations of state and
national statistics related to seat belt usage, mortality, and substance use, overview of
state laws, demonstrations relating to the physics of an accident, and interactive games
simulating driving while distracted.
As part of the educational program, teachers will be asked to distribute an anonymous survey
and a state law quiz to the students. The teachers will be provided with scripted material
to use for describing the purpose of the activity and for instructing the students how to
fill out the survey and state law quiz. This data will be obtained at three different time
intervals (pre education, post education, and delayed post education) and will assess
driving and distracted driving behaviors such as seat belt use, cell phone use, audio
habits, eating while driving, substance use, personal hygiene habits, frequency and number
of passengers, and knowledge of state laws.
During the educational program, students will be given an anonymous research phone number
and/or email address for which they will be encouraged to leave any voicemails, text
messages, and/or emails with experiences they feel are important to teenage driving.
Qualitative data obtained from any anonymous communication will be received by a non-study
team member, and will be sanitized of all caller numbers or identifiers.
In addition to the educational program, study team members will anonymously observe student
and adult drivers pulling into and out of school parking lots, or around school property, in
order to qualify their driving behaviors. Observed behaviors of students and adults will be
compared for any similarities. Observers will record seat belt use, number or passengers in
cars and any other witnessed distracted driving behaviors. Observations will be anonymous
and will not take place on school property. Student observations will take place pre, post,
and delayed post the education session. Adult observations will occur one time, independent
of student observations, as the adults will not be receiving the educational intervention
provided by the study. Freedom and Liberty High Schools in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, will be
utilized as the control group for this study. These schools will not receive the education,
however, will be surveyed, quizzed and observed at the same time intervals as the study
group.
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Observational Model: Cohort, Time Perspective: Prospective
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