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Journal Article

Citation

Shimony-Kanat S, Gofin R, Kienski Woloski Wruble AC, Mann L. Int. J. Inj. Control Safe. Promot. 2018; 25(1): 53-57.

Affiliation

Research Leadership Program, CSHE and Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences , Melbourne , Australia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/17457300.2017.1323930

PMID

28498037

Abstract

Booster seat use for 4-9 year olds remains the lowest of all age groups in many countries. The objective of this study is to examine whether parents' decision-making patterns, as measured by the Melbourne Decision Making Questionnaire, relate to car booster seat use. Israeli parents of 4-7 years old children (n = 398) answered a questionnaire about car safety and decision-making habits. Ninety per cent of parents reported having a booster seat; 70.5% reported consistent booster seat use in general and on short drives during the last month (booster seat use compliance index). Greater compliance index was positively related to a vigilant decision-making pattern, passenger compliance with rear seat belts and families with fewer children. Lower booster seat use compliance index was associated with buck-passing decision-making pattern. Health professionals and policy-makers should take into account parents' habitual decision-making patterns when designing interventions for car booster seat compliance.


Language: en

Keywords

Booster seat use; decision-making patterns, child car restraint, vigilance, buck-passing

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