Rajalin Sirpa, Summala Heikki, Pöysti Leena, Anteroinen Pasi, Porter Bryan E
Liikenneturva (Central Organization for Traffic Safety in Finland), Helsinki, Finland.
Traffic Inj Prev. 2005 Sep;6(3):225-9. doi: 10.1080/15389580590969166.
A new law took effect in Finland at the beginning of 2003 which prohibits the handheld use of mobile phones while driving a motor vehicle. The purpose of this study was to assess the impact of the law on phone usage and self-reported safety during the first few months and 16 months later to determine whether the initial level of compliance with the law had been sustained.
Data were collected by Gallup home poll before (spring 2002) and after legislation took effect (spring 2003 and 2004). A representative sample of drivers who owned a cell phone (n = 836 to 966) was interviewed each time. On-road observations were also collected in four cities for 2003 and 2004.
Just after the law, 97% of drivers were aware of the new hands free legislation. In sharp contrast to the pre-law rate of 16%, 43% reported not using the phone while driving immediately after the law and 41% one year later. The occasional users especially reduced their use of phones while driving. The law was correlated to reductions in self-reported handheld use of cell phones while driving, from 55.6% pre-law to 15.2% immediately after passage. In spite of this change, however, the hands free legislation did not reduce self-reported involvement of Finnish drivers in phone-related hazards. Handheld usage was still lower in 2004 than pre-law (20.0%), but the 32% increase from 2003 was significant. Observational data collected in Finland in 2003 and 2004 showed an even higher upward trend in handheld use (87% increase, from 3.1% to 5.8%; pre-law data were not available), and matched a similar increase reported by McCartt and Geary (2004) in their observational evaluation of New York's handheld mobile phone law.
The self-reports indicate that the hands-free law reduced handheld phone use, among occasional users especially, but did not reduce phone-related hazards. The effect of the law on phone use substantially declined within one year.
2003年初,芬兰一项新法律生效,禁止在驾驶机动车时手持使用手机。本研究的目的是评估该法律在最初几个月以及16个月后的影响,以确定对法律的初始遵守水平是否得以维持。
数据由盖洛普民意调查在立法生效前(2002年春季)和生效后(2003年春季和2004年春季)收集。每次采访拥有手机的驾驶员的代表性样本(n = 836至966)。2003年和2004年还在四个城市收集了道路观察数据。
法律刚实施后,97%的驾驶员知晓新的免提立法。与法律实施前16%的比率形成鲜明对比的是,43%的人报告在法律实施后立即开车时不使用手机,一年后这一比例为41%。偶尔使用手机的人尤其减少了开车时使用手机的频率。该法律与开车时自我报告的手持使用手机的减少相关,从法律实施前的55.6%降至法律通过后立即的15.2%。然而,尽管有这一变化,免提立法并未减少芬兰驾驶员自我报告的与手机相关的危险行为。2004年手持使用手机的情况仍低于法律实施前(20.0%),但比2003年增加32%,这一增幅具有显著性。2003年和2004年在芬兰收集的观察数据显示手持使用手机有更高的上升趋势(增加87%,从3.1%增至5.8%;法律实施前的数据不可用),这与麦卡特和吉尔里(2004年)在对纽约手持移动电话法律的观察评估中报告的类似增幅相符。
自我报告表明,免提法律减少了手持手机的使用,尤其是在偶尔使用手机的人群中,但并未减少与手机相关的危险行为。该法律对手机使用的影响在一年内大幅下降。