This report documents the findings from the Australian Transport Safety Bureaus latest survey of community attitudes to road safety. The eighteenth in a series of national surveys on community attitudes to road safety was conducted in February and March 2005. A total of 1,690 interviews were conducted with persons aged 15 years and over. The issues examined include: perceived causes of road crashes, exposure and attitudes to random breath testing, attitudes to speed, perceptions of police enforcement, mobile phone use while driving, reported usage of seat belts, involvement in road crashes, and experience of fatigue while driving. (Author/publisher)
Abstract