| Accident
Reconstruction Network > News >
February 2005 >02/24/05
Accident Reconstruction
News Article
Fewer 16-Year-Olds Are
Getting Involved in Crashes
Big Decline in Crash Rates of Beginning Drivers
Over a Decade
ARLINGTON, Va., Feb. 24 /PRNewswire/ -- The fatal crash
rate for 16-year- old drivers declined sharply after states began enacting
graduated licensing laws in the 1990s. Fatal crash involvements based on
the population of 16- year-old drivers fell 26 percent during 1993-2003.
This is the main finding of a new Insurance Institute for Highway Safety
study.
The overall number of 16-year-old drivers in fatal crashes
decreased from 1,084 in 1993 to 938 in 2003, while during the same period
there was an 18 percent increase in the 16-year-old population.
"This isn't a study of graduated licensing per se. It's
a look at the status of 16 year-olds in states both with and without graduated
licensing. Still, this study does reveal some very positive effects of the
new licensing systems. The main reason for the decline in the crash rate
is that fewer beginning drivers are getting their licenses when they turn
16," says Susan Ferguson, Institute senior vice president for research.
While the population-based ratio of fatal crash involvements
declined, the 2003 rate based on the number of licensed drivers didn't change
compared with the 1993 rate. Seventy-three 16-year-old drivers per 100,000
license holders were in fatal crashes in 1993. This compares with 74 per
100,000 in 2003.
"In time we do expect to see a drop in the fatal crash
rates per licensed 16-year-old driver," Ferguson says. "This will
happen if more states implement stronger restrictions on night driving and
on passengers in cars with beginning drivers. A number of states don't have
these policies, and states that do often allow one or more passengers or
apply the restrictions during short time periods. These restrictions are
expected to have the strongest influence on fatal crashes per licensed driver.
In the meantime, studies in several states that have looked at all police-reported
crashes, not just fatal ones, have found significant declines per licensed
driver."
Teenagers have the highest crash risk of any age group --
about four times higher than for older drivers. Teenagers are more likely
than older drivers to be in crashes involving driver error and speeding.
"The riskiest time for teens is when they first start
driving," Ferguson points out. "The key to the effectiveness of
graduated licensing is that it phases in a driver's license over time, keeping
teens in the learner phase longer and delaying a full-privilege license
until beginners are older, more mature, and more experienced."
An important finding of the new Institute study is that restrictions
on 16 year-olds did not simply shift the crash risk to older teens. Crash
rates dropped 11 percent for 17-year-olds and 6 percent for 18-19-year-olds.
One of the most dangerous scenarios is when a teenage driver
transports other teens and, on a per capita basis, this kind of crash declined
39 percent during 1993-2003. Meanwhile, most other characteristics of 16-year-olds'
crashes stayed the same over time.
A full graduated licensing law has three stages. Beginners
must remain in each of the first two stages for minimum time periods: supervised
learner's period; intermediate license (after the driver's test is passed)
limiting unsupervised driving in high-risk situations; and then a license
with full privileges available after completing the first two stages. Key
elements of the intermediate stage include limits on unsupervised driving
at night and transporting teenage passengers. Certification by parents that
a learner has driven a minimum number of supervised hours also is important.
"Parents are key to the success of graduated licensing,"
Ferguson adds. "The laws empower parents to set down their own rules
of the road and enforce them. This is especially needed because the laws
in many states still aren't strong. They don't all have three stages of
a true graduated system, and some laws that do have the stages still don't
restrict driving at night or with other teens."
Licensing of 16-year-old drivers and fatal
crash rates involving 16-year-old drivers
Percentage of Fatal crashes
16-year-olds per 100,000
licensed population
1993 42 31
1994 42 32
1995 43 35
1996 41 33
1997 43 31
1998 43 29
1999 37 29
2000 37 26
2001 34 24
2002 32 27
2003 31 23
Estimated crash reductions in selected
jurisdictions with graduated licensing
Crash
reduction
British Columbia 16%
California 0-28%
Florida 9%
Michigan 29%
North Carolina 23%
Nova Scotia 23-37%
Ohio 23%
Note
The percentage reductions shown for California are based on three
studies, two of which found crash reductions of 17 and 28 percent.
For more information go to http://www.iihs.org
Source: Insurance Institute for Highway Safety
###
Back to Accident
Reconstruction News |