INTELLIGENCE AND BEHAVIOUR AND MOTOR VEHICLE ACCIDENT MORTALITY

Author(s)
O'TOOLE, B WESTMEAD HOSPITAL, AUSTRALIA
Year
Abstract

Risk factors for mortality from motor vehicle accidents (MVAs) were examinedin all Australian former National Service conscripts of the Vietnam conflict era, by comparing all those who had died from MVAs since the end of their basic training up until 1982 with a random sample of survivors, using data available from service records. Decedents were in their third and fourth decades. Risk of mortality was higher for men with lower scores on the army intelligence test, with poorer education, with lower preenlistment occupational status, with a history of juvenile offences before army enlistment, and who went absent without leave (AWOL) during National Service. These factors were modelled using logistic regression, which showed that intelligence plus either lower levels of education or a history of offences before army service were the most important of these factors in predicting mortality in MVAs.(A).

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Publication

Library number
I 830881 IRRD 9008
Source

ACCIDENT ANALYSIS AND PREVENTION 1990 /06 E22 3 PAG: 211-21 T

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