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Journal Article

Citation

Begg DJ, Stephenson S, Alsop J, Langley JD. Inj. Prev. 2001; 7(4): 292-296.

Affiliation

Department of Preventive and Social Medicine, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand. dorothy.begg@ipru.otago.ac.nz

Copyright

(Copyright © 2001, BMJ Publishing Group)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

11770654

PMCID

PMC1730763

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine the impact on young driver crashes of the three main driving restrictions in the New Zealand graduated driver licensing (GDL) system: night-time curfew, no carrying of young passengers, and a blood alcohol limit of 30 mg/100 ml. METHOD: The database for this study was created by linking police crash reports to hospital inpatient records (1980-95). Multivariate logistic regression was used to compare car crashes involving a young driver licensed before GDL (n=2,252) with those who held a restricted graduated licence (n=980) and with those who held a full graduated licence (n=1,273), for each of the main driving restrictions. RESULTS: Compared with the pre-GDL group, the restricted licence drivers had fewer crashes at night (p=0.003), fewer involving passengers of all ages (p=0.018), and fewer where alcohol was suspected (p=0.034), but not fewer involving young casualties (p=0.980). Compared with the pre-GDL drivers, those with the full graduated licence had fewer night crashes (p=0.042) but did not differ significantly for any of the other factors examined. CONCLUSION: These results suggest that some of the GDL restrictions, especially the night-time curfew, have contributed to a reduction in serious crashes involving young drivers.

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