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Motor vehicle
crashes continue to be the leading cause of death for 16- to 20-year-olds, accounting for
approximately 5,500 fatalities and 450,000 injuries annually. A revised American Academy
of Pediatrics (AAP) policy statement, The
Teen Driver explains why teenagers are at greater risk of motor vehicle-related
injuries, describes innovative programs and proposes preventive interventions for
pediatricians, parents, legislators, educators and other child advocates. Teens (16- to 19-year-olds) are involved in
crashes more than 4 times that of 30- to 69-year-olds. Furthermore, young novice teen
drivers (16-17) have more crashes than older novice teen drivers (18-19). Many teen
crashes are caused by inexperience, inadequate practice time and judgment errors, not just
from speeding and irresponsible risk taking.
The policy recommends several ways
parents can help their teens be better drivers:
Give permission for them to obtain a
license;
Control access to the vehicle;
Set family restrictions and punishments for infractions;
Assure that the vehicle is safe;
Be a driving instructor and supervisor or provide driving lessons;
Serve as a role model for safe driving.
A new component to the policy encourages teenager-parent written contracts that help
define driving rules based on the teenagers age, maturity and degree of driving
experience. At a minimum, parents should place restrictions on nighttime driving and
limits on the number of teen passengers. Initially, the rules should be fairly strict but
can be relaxed as the teen becomes older and more experienced. The AAP sample Teen Driver
contract is available as part of the policy statement.
The AAP continues to strongly
support Graduated Driver Licensing (GDL) laws that require the following: a permit period
with extensive on-road practice (lasts at least six months during which driver must have
at least 30 hours, preferably 50, of on-road supervised practice); an intermediate or
provisional stage that lasts until age 18; limits on night driving (9 or 10pm) and number
of teen passengers. |