Curry Allison E, Pfeiffer Melissa R, Durbin Dennis R, Elliott Michael R, Kim Konny H
Center for Injury Research and Prevention, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, 3535 Market Street, Suite 1150, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA; Center for Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, 423 Guardian Drive, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Center for Injury Research and Prevention, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, 3535 Market Street, Suite 1150, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Accid Anal Prev. 2015 Mar;76:49-56. doi: 10.1016/j.aap.2014.12.022. Epub 2015 Jan 12.
Recent surveys have provided insight on the primary reasons why US teens delay licensure but are limited in their ability to estimate licensing rates and trends. State administrative licensing data are the ideal source to provide this information but have not yet been analyzed for this purpose. Our objective was to analyze New Jersey's (NJ) licensing database to: (1) describe population-based rates of licensure among 17- to 20-year-olds, overall and by gender and zip code level indicators of household income, population density, and race/ethnicity; and (2) examine recent trends in licensure. We obtained records on all licensed NJ drivers through June 2012 from the NJ Motor Vehicle Commission's licensing database and determined each young driver's age at the time of intermediate and full licensure. Data from the US Census and American Community Survey were used to estimate a fixed cohort of NJ residents who turned 17 years old in 2006-2007 (n=255,833). Licensing data were used to estimate the number of these drivers who obtained an intermediate license by each month of age (numerators) and, among those who obtained an intermediate license, time to graduation to full licensure. Overall, 40% of NJ residents-and half of those who ultimately obtained a license by age 21-were licensed within a month of NJ's minimum licensing age of 17, 64% by their 18th birthday, and 81% by their 21st birthday. Starkly different patterns of licensure were observed by socioeconomic indicators; for example, 65% of 17-year-olds residing in the highest-income zip codes were licensed in the first month of eligibility compared with 13% of residents living in the lowest-income zip codes. The younger an individual obtained their intermediate license, the earlier they graduated to a full license. Finally, the rate and timing of licensure in NJ has been relatively stable from 2006 to 2012, with at most a 1-3% point decline in rates. These findings support the growing body of literature suggesting that teens delay licensure primarily for economic reasons and that a substantial proportion of potentially high-risk teens may be obtaining licenses outside the auspices of a graduated driver licensing system. Finally, our finding of a relatively stable trend in licensure in recent years is in contrast to national-level reports of a substantial decline in licensure rates.
最近的调查揭示了美国青少年延迟获得驾照的主要原因,但在估计驾照获得率和趋势方面能力有限。州行政许可数据是提供此类信息的理想来源,但尚未为此目的进行分析。我们的目标是分析新泽西州(NJ)的许可数据库,以:(1)描述17至20岁人群基于人口的驾照获得率,总体情况以及按家庭收入、人口密度和种族/族裔的性别和邮政编码级别指标进行描述;(2)研究驾照获得的近期趋势。我们从新泽西州机动车委员会的许可数据库中获取了截至2012年6月所有获得驾照的新泽西州司机的记录,并确定了每位年轻司机获得中级驾照和完整驾照时的年龄。使用美国人口普查和美国社区调查的数据来估计2006 - 2007年满17岁的新泽西州居民的固定队列(n = 255,833)。许可数据用于估计这些司机中每个年龄月获得中级驾照的人数(分子),以及在获得中级驾照的人中,毕业获得完整驾照的时间。总体而言,40%的新泽西州居民——以及最终在21岁前获得驾照的居民中的一半——在新泽西州最低许可年龄17岁后的一个月内获得了驾照,64%在他们18岁生日时获得,81%在他们21岁生日时获得。社会经济指标显示出明显不同的驾照获得模式;例如,居住在高收入邮政编码地区的17岁青少年中,65%在符合资格的第一个月就获得了驾照,而居住在低收入邮政编码地区的居民中这一比例为13%。个人获得中级驾照的年龄越小,毕业获得完整驾照的时间就越早。最后,2006年至2012年新泽西州的驾照获得率和时间相对稳定,率最多下降1 - 3个百分点。这些发现支持了越来越多的文献表明青少年主要出于经济原因延迟获得驾照,并且相当一部分潜在高风险青少年可能在分级驾驶员许可系统之外获得驾照。最后,我们发现近年来驾照获得趋势相对稳定,这与国家层面报告的驾照获得率大幅下降形成对比。