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| Ranking |
Evidence-Based Practice |
| Description |
Safety belt laws mandate the use of safety belts by motor vehicle occupants. All current U.S. laws cover front seat occupants. Other requirements, such as rear seat coverage, fines, affected age groups, type of enforcement, and exempted vehicles and drivers vary by state.
The Community Preventive Services Task Force recommends safety belt laws as a strategy based on strong evidence of their effectiveness in increasing safety belt use and reducing fatal and non-fatal injuries among adolescents and adults. |
| Results / Accomplishments |
Results from the Systematic Reviews:
Thirty-three studies qualified for the systematic review.
• Fatal injuries: median decrease of 9% (interquartile interval: 2% to 18% decrease; 6 studies)
• Nonfatal injuries: median decrease of 2% (interquartile interval: 15% decrease to 11% increase; 6 studies)
• Fatal and nonfatal injuries combined: median decrease of 8% (interquartile interval: 3% to 20% decrease; 9 studies)
• Observed safety belt use: median increase of 33 percentage points (interquartile interval: 20 to 36 percentage points; 10 studies)
• Police-reported safety belt use: increase of 26 percentage points (2 studies)
• Self-reported safety belt use: median increase of 16 percentage points (interquartile interval: 13 to 19 percentage points; 4 studies) |
| Categories |
Health / Prevention & Safety
Government & Politics / Programs, Policies, & Laws
Transportation / Personal Vehicle Travel
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| Source |
Community Guide Branch Epidemiology and Analysis Program Office, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention |
| Location |
Country: USA |
| Primary Contact |
communityguide@cdc.gov
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| For more details |
http://www.thecommunityguide.org/index.html
http://www.thecommunityguide.org/mvoi/safetybel...
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| Target Audience |
Adults |
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