The role of pupil liaisons’ on traffic penalties and road traffic injuries - Payesh (Health Monitor)
Wed, Dec 25, 2024
OPEN ACCESS
Volume 9, Issue 4 (OCTOBER 2010)                   Payesh 2010, 9(4): 339-348 | Back to browse issues page

XML Persian Abstract Print


Download citation:
BibTeX | RIS | EndNote | Medlars | ProCite | Reference Manager | RefWorks
Send citation to:

Hamid Soori, Elahe Ainy, Ali Montazeri, Sepideh Omidvari, Ali Reza Jahangiree, Gholam Reza Shiran. The role of pupil liaisons’ on traffic penalties and road traffic injuries. Payesh 2010; 9 (4) :339-348
URL: http://payeshjournal.ir/article-1-548-en.html
Abstract:   (7649 Views)

Objective(s): To determine the role of pupil liaisons’ education on social discipline promotion and road traffic injury prevention.
Methods: This was a before-after interventional study on 2800 pupils randomly selected from 6 different districts of Tehran, Iran. The pupils were taught about common driving offences and were asked to note and prevent offences if their parents performed offences. Data were collected by a questionnaire for childern’s performances and other demographic information.
Results: Subjects were pupils 8-15 years. The mean age of participants was 11 years. Overall, 47.7 percent of pupils were boys. Non use of seat belt (39.1%), speaking with mobile while driving (31.8%) and speeding (29.8%) were major offences as noted by pupils’ liaisons. Recorded offences by traffic police before the intervention for thease families was 2789 cases. A significant differences with 17.9 percent reduction in offences were observed after intervention (2290 cases, P<0.001).  The most offences reduction were eating and drinking during driving (92.7%).
Conclusion: Pupil liaisons’ program was effective on reduction of driving offences. The most reduction was eating or drinking during driving. All 9 common offences which were monitored by pupil liaisons’ were effective on reduction of offences except for mobile speaking while driving.
Full-Text [PDF 157 kb]   (4734 Downloads)    
type of study: Descriptive |
Accepted: 2018/11/28 | Published: 2010/10/15

Add your comments about this article : Your username or Email:
CAPTCHA

Rights and Permissions
Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

© 2024 All Rights Reserved | Payesh (Health Monitor)

Designed & Developed by : Yektaweb