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'Tween' Traffic Safety Research Yields New Safety Tips
Nation's First Tween Demonstration Projects Offer Insight
into Belt Use and Seating Position Habits of 8 to 12 Year Olds
WASHINGTON, Feb. 14 /PRNewswire/ -- Large numbers of
8 to 12 year olds - dubbed "tweens" by marketers - are needlessly
at risk when riding in motor vehicles according to a research report released
today by the Automotive Coalition for Traffic Safety (ACTS).
The report, based on demonstration projects in Dallas, TX and
Joplin, MO, found that half of tweens surveyed do not always wear seat belts
and many sit in front seats. The surveys also found that parents have more
influence on tween behavior than many people realize. The news is significant
because seat belt use overall begins to decline as children grow older.
"Tweens are at an important age, a time when they are developing
habits they will carry into their teen and adult years," said Christene
Jennings, ACTS director of programs who managed the project. "We're finding
belt use and seating position for tweens are significantly influenced by their
parents. And we're learning how parents can be more effective at getting tweens
properly restrained in a back seat."
The two demonstration sites had different populations - inner
city, largely Hispanic in Dallas and rural, predominantly Caucasian in Joplin.
About 63% of Joplin tweens and 53% of Dallas tweens said they always wear
their seat belts.
The safest place for children 12 and under is properly restrained
in a back seat, in an age and size- appropriate restraint: child restraint,
booster seat or a properly fitting seat belt. Unfortunately, as children age,
restraint use declines and their desire to sit in the front seat grows. Overall
about a third of tweens surveyed reported sitting in the front seat. About
half of 12 year-olds in both Dallas (52%) and Joplin (48%) usually sat in
the front seat. Research shows children are 40% more likely to be injured
in the front seat than if they had been seated in back.
National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) Acting Chairman,
Mark Rosenker said, "These findings clearly show that too many children
age 12 and under are riding at risk in cars because they are not properly
restrained in rear seats. Every child should ride buckled up in the back seat
every time they get in a vehicle." NTSB Board Member Kitty Higgins said,
"Adults can provide the example. National fatality data shows when adult
drivers are not restrained 91% of 8-15 year old fatals are unrestrained. However,
when adult drivers are restrained 48% of 8-15 year old fatals are restrained.
The NTSB has a recommendation that states strengthen and enforce laws requiring
children to be buckled up and in the rear seat. Strong laws support parents'
efforts to properly restrain their children."
Tweens are well aware of safety messages, including the benefits
of buckling up and dangers associated with sitting in front of a deploying
air bag. However, safety awareness alone has limited influence on how tweens
ride in vehicles because other factors may be more important to them. Even
though tweens are becoming more independent, they still need parental guidance
to ensure their safety in cars.
Surveys showed when parents take control, tweens tend to sit
in the back. Two thirds of tweens sit in a back seat when parents make the
decision, compared to only half of tweens who independently decide where to
sit. When tweens in both pilot sites were asked what might encourage them
to sit in a back seat, most said being told by a parent or the vehicle's driver.
This was especially true for those tweens who were less likely to buckle up.
Along with the report, ACTS developed a tip sheet for parents
entitled (quite appropriately for Valentine's Day) Hold on to the One You
Love - With A Seat Belt. It offers parents specific suggestions for how to
persuade tweens to buckle up in a back seat:
* Buckle up yourself! Tweens still think of their parents as
role models. Research shows when parents are restrained, their children are
much more likely to be as well.
* Tell them it's the law. Seat belts are mandatory by law. Let
tweens know belt use isn't an option; it's the law.
* Let your tween pick the radio station. Tweens said being in
control of the radio is a major benefit of the front seat. Make a deal with
your tween: If he sits buckled in back, he can choose.
* Give your tween something to do in a back seat. Electronic
games can be stored in a back seat and make games in the front seat off limits.
* Let tweens "own" their space in a back seat. Tweens
are eager to claim their own space. Let them set up places to keep things
in a back seat so that's the first place they want to go.
These new insights came from the two pilot projects that were
underwritten by ACTS. Though they are not necessarily representative of all
tweens, they offered a snapshot of tween behavior for ACTS and two social
marketing organizations, Marketing for Change, Inc. and the Academy for Educational
Development, who analyzed the research and created the informative report
for traffic safety advocates, communities and others interested in tween safety
issues. Copies of the report can be downloaded from their new interactive
website, http://www.tweensafety.org.
"Traffic safety advocates have achieved tremendous success
in getting younger children properly restrained in rear seats. It is time
to extend that focus to 8 to 12 year-olds who, through lower restraint use
and improper seating habits, are at increased risk of injury or death,"
Jennings added. "Armed with this information, we can reach out to tweens,
their parents and others who influence their behavior, increase the number
who are properly restrained in back seats and most importantly decrease the
risk of serious or fatal injury in a crash."
ACTS (http://www.actsinc.org)
is a nonprofit organization that educates the public and policymakers about
traffic safety issues, particularly those associated with occupant restraint
systems and other vehicle technologies. ACTS develops educational materials,
sponsors research and conducts symposia on a variety of highway safety topics.
ACTS' members include DaimlerChrysler Corporation; Ford Motor Company; General
Motors Corporation; Mazda North American Operations; Nissan North America,
Inc; Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc.; Volkswagen of America, Inc.; Alliance
of Automobile Manufacturers, Inc. and the Automotive Occupant Restraints Council,
Inc.
Source: Automotive Coalition for Traffic Safety
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