Study of Methods for Increasing Safety Belt Use

Study of Methods for Increasing Safety Belt Use
Author: Steering Committee for the Study of Methods to Increase Use of Safety Belts
Publisher:
Total Pages: 18
Release: 1980
Genre: Automobiles
ISBN:

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Study of Methods for Increasing Safety Belt Use; Prepared by the Transportation Research Board, National Academy of Sciences. Comments on the Study by the U.S. Department of Transportation National Highway Traffic Safety Administration

Study of Methods for Increasing Safety Belt Use; Prepared by the Transportation Research Board, National Academy of Sciences. Comments on the Study by the U.S. Department of Transportation National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 72
Release: 1981
Genre:
ISBN:

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Child Safety Seat and Safety Belt Use Among Urban Travelers

Child Safety Seat and Safety Belt Use Among Urban Travelers
Author: Charles B. Stoke
Publisher:
Total Pages: 46
Release: 1986
Genre: Automobiles
ISBN:

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The four major metropolitan areas of Virginia were surveyed to determine the extent to which safety restraints were being used by urban travelers. Observers were stationed at selected signalized intersections and displayed to stopped motorists a clipboard bearing the question "Are you wearing safety belts?" The observers then approached the vehicles to visually verify any response given and to record whether safety belts or child safety seats were being used. They also recorded the sex and approximate age of each occupant and whether the child safety seats were being correctly or incorrectly used. These observations occurred in two series: 1) 1974-1977 and 2) 1983-1986. Only the latter data are reported here. Four characteristics of the survey sample were analyzed to determine whether they biased the observed belt use results. The number of vehicles observed during each of the three daily periods and in the four areas of the state and the sex of the observed occupants occurred in similar proportions in each of the four surveys and should not have caused year-to-year differences in belt usage. There were, however, variations in the age distributions of the vehicle occupants in the four survey samples, and these differences (more older and fewer middle adults) should have resulted in slightly lower use rates in 1986, all other influences being the same. Observed belt usages were analyzed according to a number of vehicle, occupant, and geographic characteristics. Each of these is discussed in a separate section of the report. Belt use rates were higher in 1986 than during the previous four years, with 35.5% of the drivers and 33.1% of all passengers using some form of safety restraint. The passage of the Child Safety Seat law in 1982 resulted in a significant increase in usage by passengers less than four years of age. During all four years, nearly three-fourths of the infants traveling as right front passengers and two-thirds of the infants classified as remaining passengers were observed to be in safety restraints.