Department of Biostatistics, University of Michigan School of Public Health, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109, USA.
Traffic Inj Prev. 2012;13(3):258-64. doi: 10.1080/15389588.2011.648289.
To utilize teen traffic safety belief profiles to improve targeting of resources and messages to young novice drivers.
The National Young Driver Survey is a nationally representative sample 5665 of 9th to 11th graders in the United States. Using latent class analysis, we grouped beliefs about 25 safety-relevant behaviors into a summary set of belief profiles and related these profiles to demographics and driver/passenger experience.
We determined 5 safety belief profiles of teens: "everything" (rated most of the 25 behaviors as important to safety); "drivers/personal responsibility" (rated driver-related behaviors but few others as important); "driver drinking" (rated only driver alcohol use as always important); "distractions/external forces" (rated predominantly passenger rather than driver issues as important); and "nothing" (rated no issues as important). Three key groups emerged who were more likely than their counterparts to belong to the distractions/external forces than the everything class and for whom targeted messaging might be effective: males, non-white adolescents, and teens who had experienced an injury crash as a driver.
The classes appear to organize around the locus of control (LOC) social learning framework, with some teens perceiving crashes resulting primarily from their own behavior and others believing that forces in their environment determine the events that result in a crash. Designing interventions that help young drivers understand their role in crashes may help improve the safety behavior of young drivers. In particular, for those involved in crashes, interventions designed to help them understand that the crash was a result of their actions, rather than a random or externally driven event, may influence them to take control with safety-oriented behaviors.
利用青少年交通安全信念档案,改善对年轻新手驾驶员的资源和信息的定位。
国家青年驾驶员调查是一项具有全国代表性的样本,共包括美国 9 至 11 年级的 5665 名学生。我们使用潜在类别分析,将 25 种与安全相关的行为的信念分组到一个综合的信念档案中,并将这些档案与人口统计学和驾驶员/乘客经验相关联。
我们确定了青少年的 5 种安全信念档案:“一切”(将 25 种行为中的大多数评为对安全至关重要);“驾驶员/个人责任”(将驾驶员相关行为评为重要,但很少将其他行为评为重要);“驾驶员饮酒”(仅将驾驶员饮酒评为始终重要);“分心/外部力量”(将主要是乘客而不是驾驶员的问题评为重要);以及“无”(将无问题评为重要)。有三个关键群体比一切类别的人更有可能属于分心/外部力量类,并且针对这些群体的有针对性的信息传递可能会有效:男性、非白人青少年和作为驾驶员经历过伤害事故的青少年。
这些类别似乎围绕着控制源(LOC)社会学习框架组织,一些青少年认为事故主要是由自己的行为引起的,而另一些青少年则认为环境中的力量决定了导致事故的事件。设计帮助年轻驾驶员了解自己在事故中的作用的干预措施可能有助于提高年轻驾驶员的安全行为。特别是对于那些涉及事故的人,设计干预措施帮助他们了解事故是由于他们的行为,而不是随机或外部驱动的事件,可能会影响他们采取安全导向的行为来控制事故。