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RESEARCH PRODUCT

More aware, more protected: a cross-sectional study on road safety skills predicting the use of passive safety elements among Spanish teenagers

Sergio A. UsecheLeandro GarrigósLuis MontoroFrancisco Alonso

subject

MaleAutomobile DrivingHealth Knowledge Attitudes PracticeMediation (statistics)road safety skillsAdolescentPsychological interventionPoison controlOccupational safety and healthDevelopmental psychology03 medical and health sciencesRisk-TakingSex Factors0302 clinical medicineInjury prevention1724HumansMedicine1506030212 general & internal medicineChildOriginal Researchpassive safetyteenagerseducation in road safetybusiness.industrySeguretat viàriahelmetAccidents TrafficAge FactorsHuman factors and ergonomicsGeneral MedicineAwarenessRisk perceptionCross-Sectional StudiesSocioeconomic FactorsPsicologiaSpainFemalePublic Healthseat beltSafetybusinessPsychosocial030217 neurology & neurosurgery

description

ObjectiveThis study had two objectives: first, to test the effects of sociodemographic variables, and the effects of three key road safety skills (knowledge–risk perception–attitudes) on the use of passive safety elements (PSEs) among teenagers; and second, to assess the differential impact of the study variables on PSEs use from a gender-based perspective.Setting and participantsThis cross-sectional study was framed in the paradigm of primary care, and it involved students from several educational centres in Spain. A sample of 827 Spanish teenagers (52.4% females and 47.6% males) with a mean age of M=14.41–7 (12–19) years was used.ResultsThrough SEM modelling, we found that the use of PSEs is largely explained by psychosocial variables through the mediation of three road safety skills: risk perception (β=0.103***), rule knowledge (β=0.095*) and attitudes towards road safety (β=0.186***). Furthermore, multigroup analyses showed that, although most variables explain the use of PSEs among teenagers in a similar way, key gender-based differences exist in this regard.ConclusionsRoad safety skills have a significant effect on the use of PSEs among Spanish teenagers, and gender explains some differences in the mechanisms which predict them. Also, in the study we discuss the need for strengthening school-based interventions aimed at helping this vulnerable group of road users acquire and develop positive behavioural competences.

10.1136/bmjopen-2019-035007https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2019-035007