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Journal Article

Citation

Geller ES, Bruff CD, Nimmer JG. J. Appl. Behav. Anal. 1985; 18(4): 309-314.

Affiliation

Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1985, Wiley-Blackwell)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

16795691

PMCID

PMC1308026

Abstract

A community-based strategy for promoting safety belt use was field-tested in two adjacent rural communities, one populated by a preponderance of students, faculty, and staff of a major university. The intervention involved the front-seat passenger of a stopped vehicle displaying to the driver of an adjacent, stopped vehicle an 11 x 14 inch flash card that read, "PLEASE BUCKLE UP-I CARE." If the driver buckled up, the "flasher" flipped over the card and displayed the message, "THANK YOU." This flash card was shown to 1,087 unbuckled drivers; 82% of these drivers looked at the flash card and 22% of these complied with the buckle-up request. Compliance was not influenced by the age or gender of the "flasher" (young child vs. college student), nor by the gender of the driver; but significantly more drivers in the university town buckled up following the flash card presentation (25% mean compliance in the college town vs. 14% in the other community). To date, over 2,000 individuals have received a buckle-up flash card for their own use.


Language: en

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