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| Ranking |
Evidence-Based Practice |
| Description |
Primary safety belt laws allow police to stop motorists solely for being unbelted. Secondary safety belt laws permit police to ticket unbelted motorists only if they are stopped for other reasons such as speeding.
The Community Preventive Services Task Force recommends primary safety belt laws based on strong evidence of their superior effectiveness over secondary enforcement laws in reducing motor vehicle-related injuries and deaths. |
| Results / Accomplishments |
Results from the Systematic Reviews:
Thirteen studies qualified for the systematic review.
• Nine studies compared states with primary laws to those with secondary laws.
• Four studies evaluated the effect of changing from secondary to primary laws.
• Fatal injuries: median decrease of 8% in primary law states versus secondary law states (interquartile intervals: 3%-14% decrease; 5 studies)
• Observed seat belt use: median increase of 14 percentage points in primary law states versus secondary law states (interquartile intervals: 12 to 23 percentage points; 5 studies)
• Police-reported safety belt use: the effect estimate could not be calculated (1 study)
• Self-reported safety belt use: the effect estimate could not be calculated (2 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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