SMOKING, DRIVER EDUCATION, AND OTHER CORRELATES OF OF ACCIDENTS AMONG YOUNG MALES

A SAMPLE OF 2,961 AIRMEN, AGE 17-20, WAS ADMINISTERED A VARIETY OF TESTS AND A BIOGRAPHICAL QUESTIONNAIRE, AND THE RESULTANT VARIABLES RELATED TO ACCIDENT FREQUENCY. OF 19 VARIABLES, 6 WERE SIGNIFICANT UPON CROSS-VALIDATION, INCLUDING THE AFQT, MILEAGE, VIOLATIONS, VALUE OF PARENTS' HOME, FAMILY INCOME, AND SMOKING HABITS. HIGH SCHOOL DRIVER EDUCATION DEMONSTRATED NO RELATIONSHIP TO ACCIDENT FREQUENCY. THE HIGHER ACCIDENT RATE FOUND AMOUNG SMOKERS MAY BE PARTIALLY THE RESULT OF SIGNIFICANT OXYGEN DEFICIENCY AND/OR THE POSSESSION OF CERTAIN PERSONALITY TRAITS.

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  • Accession Number: 00222004
  • Record Type: Publication
  • Source Agency: Highway Safety Literature
  • Files: TRIS
  • Created Date: Apr 17 1973 12:00AM