Parents have a lot on their parental plate. There are many items of teaching that need emphasis as children get older. But there is a thought in the media that with all of the pressing societal issues facing parents and their teens, parents are underestimating the risk that driving presents to their teenagers and often allow dangerous behavior including night-time trips and carpools, a safety group said.
Only 24% of parents identified hazardous driving or car crashes as their biggest safety concern for children ages 15-19, according to a National Safety Council survey released recently. The category of drugs and alcohol was cited by a similar share of parents. Other top concerns included bullying, Internet safety, teen pregnancy and school shootings.
The council is seeking to sharpen focus on some of the most routine dangers by addressing misconceptions about risk. The group in June highlighted that overdoses from prescription painkillers and car accidents are more likely to kill Americans than dramatic events like plane crashes and cataclysmic storms.
“The biggest threat to teens’ safety is sitting in the driveway,” Deborah A.P. Hersman, president and chief executive officer of the NSC, said in a statement. “The statistics have shown this for years, yet too many parents still do not appreciate that the first year of driving is a particularly deadly time in a teen’s life.”
Almost half of parents set the driving curfew at 10 p.m. or later, even though 40% of fatal crashes are after that hour, according to the council. The group also said that most parents who talk on a mobile phone while behind the wheel continue that behavior when teens are passengers.
In 2013, there were more than 6,600 deaths in the 15-24 age group tied to motor-vehicle mishaps, according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data. That’s more than all non- transportation accidents combined, a group that includes poisoning from “noxious substances.”
The National Safety Council is a non-profit organization focused on reducing risks in the workplace, on the roads and in homes. The group released the report in observance of National Teen Driver Safety Week last month.
The review was conducted for the council in September by Irwin Broh Research using an online consumer panel. There were 1,010 completed responses, and the sample was balanced by gender, geographic region and ethnicity, according to the NSC.
Teen vehicle safety contributes to us having less auto insurance premiums for both parents and teens. We monitor our youthful drivers and do all that we can to educate newly licensed drivers the rules of the road as it pertains to insurance. We’re here to help you! Contact any of our staff at 615.377.1212 or EMAIL us at info@BentonWhite.com. Our teen driver insurance rates are competitive and if you or your teen has a tough driving history, we can insure them too! Let us know if we can help!
Portions of this article are taken from a PropertyCasualty360 article – Parents focused on drugs, bullying overlook risk of car crashes by Christie Boyden with BLOOMBERG