Are your Teens buckled up?

The leading cause of death for American Teens can be reduced!

Many teen deaths and life threatening injuries from car crashes are preventable.  There are proven strategies that can improve the safety of teen drivers behind the wheel, but if they are not buckling up…  the fatality statistics will continue to be high.

To many of us, wearing your seatbelt is common sense… but the fact is, teens are underestimating the danger of not wearing their seat belts. To make matters worse, teen peers are dramatically influencing this risky behavior. Is your teen wearing his/her seat belt even if it’s considered uncool?

DriveSafeRideSafe is encouraging teen driving education that combines parental involvement and peer strategies in the learning process to increase teen seat belt use and the overall safety of young drivers.

Here are the Sad Seat Belt Facts for Teens

  • Two-thirds of teens killed in crashes were not wearing seat belts.
  • Teens have the lowest rate of seat belt use in comparison to mature drivers.
  • In 2005, 10% of high school students reported they rarely or never wear seat belts when riding with someone else.
  • Male high school students (12.5%) were more likely than female students (7.8%) to rarely or never wear seat belts.
Take steps to improve your teen’s safety. Ask your teen about his/her seat belt habits. For more parental support, visit http://www.drivesaferidesafe.com for our DVD with advice for parents to help their teens before, during and after the time they’re learning to drive .

Photo credit to Butch Lysholm at oaire.com

Fact References:

The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP)

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Safer Roads Campaign- United Nations News

 United Nations
– Announces 10 Year Campaign to Make Our Roads Safer

Road crashes are now the leading cause of death for young people ages 10-24. Worldwide, someone is killed on our roads every six seconds! This epidemic ranks with HIV/AIDS, Malaria and Tuberculosis as a devastating global killer.

On May 11th the United Nations General Assembly proclaimed the period 2011-2020 as the Decade of Action for Road Safety. The goal is to reduce the level of road fatalities around the world by increasing awareness nationally, regionally and globally.

We at Drive Safe Ride Safe  believe that the power to change these statistics starts with teaching parents how to help their teens learn to drive.

For more information about the “Make Roads Safe” campaign, go to http://www.makeroadssafe.org/