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Parental Predictors of Teen Driving Risk

Authors :
Kenneth H. Beck
R. Raleigh
Teresa Shattuck
Source :
American Journal of Health Behavior. 25:10-20
Publication Year :
2001
Publisher :
JCFCorp SG PTE LTD, 2001.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To determine the nature and prevalence of parental involvement with teen driving and its relationship to teen driving risk. METHODS: A statewide sample of 424 Maryland parents and their provisionally licensed teenagers were interviewed. RESULTS: Parents were unaware of the extent to which their teens had engaged in high-risk traffic events, such as being distracted by friends or driving too fast. Teens who were allowed unsupervised access to a car at least several times a week were 3 times as likely to have driven too fast than were those who had access once a month or less. The frequency of parental teaching of driving skills was not strongly related to teen risk taking. CONCLUSION: The need to increase parents' capacity to impose and enforce driving restrictions on provisionally licensed teen drivers is indicated. Language: en

Details

ISSN :
19457359 and 10873244
Volume :
25
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Health Behavior
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0ebcecf9073aaa326059b639062b6af9