Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
587575 Journal of Safety Research 2012 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

IntroductionWhile the negative influence of passengers on driving is usually studied, young passengers may protect against young drivers' crash involvement by speaking out and trying to stop unsafe driving behavior. This study sought to examine psychosocial constructs of young passengers who are likely to intervene in their friends' risky driving.MethodUniversity students aged 17 to 25 years who were single (n = 123) or in a romantic relationship (n = 130) completed an online survey measuring protective factors.ResultsThe combination of individual, friend and (for participants in a relationship) romantic partner protective factors predicted self-reported passenger intervening intentions.Impact on IndustrySince peer passengers often increase young drivers' crash risk, research on passenger intervening has significant implications for road safety strategies. The findings provide support for the operationalization of protective factors in strategies that target passenger intervening behavior.

► Protective factors predicted self-reported intended passenger intervention in risky driving situations ► Findings supported the protection-risk framework ► Romantic partner protective factors should be incorporated in future protection-risk research

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemical Health and Safety
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