Rater reliability and rater effects on the safe driving behavior measure.

Author(s)
Classen, S. Wen, P.-S. Velozo, C.A. Bédard, M. Winter, S.M. Brumback, B.A. & Lanford, D.N.
Year
Abstract

The authors used the Safe Driving Behavior Measure (SDBM) to determine rater reliability and rater effects (erratic responses, severity, leniency) in three rater groups: 80 older drivers (mean age = 73.26, standard deviation = 5.30), 80 family members or caregivers (age range = 20–85 yr), and two driving evaluators. Rater agreement was significant only between the evaluators and the family members or caregivers. Participants rated driving ability without erratic effects. They observed an overall rater effect only between the evaluator and family members or caregivers, with the evaluators being the more severe rater group. Training family members or caregivers to rate driving behaviors more consistently with the evaluator’s ratings may enhance the SDBM’s usability and provide a role for occupational therapists to interpret proxy reports as an entry point for logical and efficient driving safety interventions. (Author/publisher)

Publication

Library number
20121297 ST [electronic version only]
Source

American Journal of Occupational Therapy, Vol. 66 (2012), No. 1 (January/February), p. 69-77, 22 ref.

Our collection

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