Researchers examined data from an online survey of 152 teens who
owned smartphones and admitted to texting and driving. Even though
they confessed to this dangerous habit, 90 percent said they were
willing to give up reading texts while driving, 95 percent could
consider no longer sending texts and 99 percent said they might stay
off social media.
The trick that would make many commit to these promises wasn't a
parent threatening to take away the keys. It was the promise of cash
prizes, and as little as $5 a week looked like enough to make a
difference.
"Just telling your teen to stop texting while driving is not going
to work, particularly for those who do it a lot," said lead study
author M. Kit Delgado of the Perelman School of Medicine at the
University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.
All of the teens surveyed were 16 to 17 years old, fairly
inexperienced drivers and very attached to their smartphones.
They were much more willing to consider giving up texting in the car
than they were willing to entertain the thought of driving without
the navigation or music apps on their phones. Only 59 percent would
give up Google Maps and other navigation apps, and just 43 percent
would drive without using their phone as a virtual jukebox.
Even though the cash rewards researchers tested were all valued
around $250 a year, not all of the prizes were equally appealing to
teens.
Individual prizes were the most popular - three of four teens said
they would reduce texting while driving if they could earn $5 in
cash or gift cards each week they avoided this habit. Starting out
with $250 in an account and losing $5 every week they texted behind
the wheel only appealed to 63 percent of the participants, however.
A little more than half of the teens were willing to consider giving
up texting in order to work toward this goal with a group of friends
and share a $1,000 prize at the end of the year. Roughly half of
them would also stop texting to get a $250 discount on their annual
insurance premiums.
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Fewer than one in five said they would stop texting just because
their parents expressed concern, researchers report in Traffic
Injury Prevention.
Beyond its small size, another limitation of the study is that it
wasn't a controlled experiment designed to prove whether or how
specific rewards would actually motivate teens to stop texting and
driving.
"I think in general most teens know that texting while driving is
dangerous. It is among the most dangerous of all distractions behind
the wheel, because it requires the driver to take his/her hands off
the wheel (manual distraction), eyes off the road (visual
distraction), and mind off the road (cognitive distraction)," said
Despina Stavrinos, a psychology researcher at the University of
Alabama at Birmingham who wasn't involved in the study.
Teens who perceive texting while driving as very dangerous are also
the same individuals who continue to engage in this very activity
quite frequently, Stavrinos said by email.
"I think parents need to model safe driving behaviors for their kids
starting an early age (before they begin driving)," Stavrinos added.
"Parents also can importantly set rules and restrictions on what
happens in the vehicle and limiting cell phone use."
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2IdUzZd Traffic Injury Prevention, online
April 13, 2018.
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