Zhu Motao, Cummings Peter, Zhao Songzhu, Rice Thomas
Center for Injury Research and Policy, The Research Institute at Nationwide Children's Hospital, 700 Children's Drive, Columbus, OH, 43205, USA.
Injury Control Research Center, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2016 Jul 27;16:647. doi: 10.1186/s12889-016-3206-7.
Young novice drivers have crash rates higher than any other age group. To address this problem, graduated driver licensing (GDL) laws have been implemented in the United States to require an extended learner permit phase, and create night time driving or passenger restrictions for adolescent drivers. GDL allows adolescents to gain experience driving under low-risk conditions with the aim of reducing crashes. The restricted driving might increase riding with parents or on buses, which might be safer, or walking or biking, which might be more dangerous. We examined whether GDL increases non-driver travels, and whether it reduces total travels combining drivers and non-drivers.
We used data from the US National Household Travel Survey for the years 1995-1996, 2001-2002, and 2008-2009 to estimate the adjusted ratio for the number of trips and trip kilometers made by persons exposed to a GDL law, compared with those not exposed.
Adolescents aged 16 years had fewer trips and kilometers as drivers when exposed to a GDL law: ratio 0.84 (95 % confidence interval (CI) 0.71, 1.00) for trips; 0.79 (0.63, 0.98) for kilometers. For adolescents aged 17 years, the trip ratio was 0.94 (0.83, 1.07) and the kilometers ratio 0.80 (0.63, 1.03). There was little association between GDL laws and trips or kilometers traveled by other methods: ratio 1.03 for trips and 1.00 for kilometers for age 16 years, 0.94 for trips and 1.07 for kilometers for age 17.
If these associations are causal, GDL laws reduced driving kilometers by about 20 % for 16 and 17 year olds, and reduced the number of driving trips by 16 % among 16 year olds. GDL laws showed little relationship with trips by other methods.
年轻的新手司机撞车率高于其他任何年龄组。为解决这一问题,美国实施了分级驾驶员执照(GDL)法律,要求延长学习许可证阶段,并对青少年驾驶员实施夜间驾驶或乘客限制。GDL允许青少年在低风险条件下积累驾驶经验,以减少撞车事故。受限驾驶可能会增加与父母一起乘车或乘坐公交车的次数,这可能更安全,或者增加步行或骑自行车的次数,这可能更危险。我们研究了GDL是否会增加非驾驶出行,以及它是否会减少驾驶员和非驾驶员的总出行量。
我们使用了1995 - 1996年、2001 - 2002年和2008 - 2009年美国国家家庭出行调查的数据,以估计受GDL法律影响的人与未受影响的人相比,出行次数和出行公里数的调整比率。
16岁青少年在受GDL法律影响时,作为驾驶员的出行次数和公里数减少:出行次数比率为0.84(95%置信区间(CI)0.71, 1.00);公里数比率为0.79(0.63, 0.98)。对于17岁青少年,出行次数比率为0.94(0.83, 1.07),公里数比率为0.80(0.63, 1.03)。GDL法律与通过其他方式出行的次数或公里数之间几乎没有关联:16岁时出行次数比率为1.03,公里数比率为1.00;17岁时出行次数比率为0.