Fatal crashes involving 16-year-old drivers : narrative descriptions.

Author(s)
Williams, A.F. Preusser, D.F. & Ferguson, S.A.
Year
Abstract

Young, beginning drivers, particularly 16 year-olds, have a very high risk of crash involvement. This is due primarily to inexperience with the driving task combined with risky driving practices associated with immaturity. Analysis of U.S. data indicates that the crashes of 16 year-olds are more often single-vehicle events, involve speeding and higher passenger occupancy rates (often other teenagers), and are more likely to result from driver error. The present study looked in-depth at fatal night-time crashes of 16 year-olds, using police and newspaper reports from California for 1989-94. Narrative descriptions are provided that illustrate the contributing events leading up to the crash. These narratives dramatically illustrate how risk taking, sometimes encouraged by other teenage passengers, can heighten the potential for a crash. They also illustrate that many crashes result from aberrant actions not likely amenable to change through educational efforts. Graduated licensing, a system that allows for the initial accumulation of driving experience under less hazardous conditions, would prohibit recreational, night-time driving that is particularly dangerous for young, beginning drivers. (Author/publisher)

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Publication

Library number
C 25207 [electronic version only] /83 /
Source

Arlington, VA, Insurance Institute for Highway Safety IIHS, 1996, 13 p., 5 ref.

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.