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Articles

Observed relationships between driver and passenger restraint use in the front and rear seats

, , , , &
Pages 352-357 | Received 21 Dec 2021, Accepted 11 May 2022, Published online: 10 Jun 2022
 

Abstract

Objective

Seat belt usage has increased substantially since the 1960s, yet driver use continues to affect passenger usage. Recent observational restraint use findings for Maryland will examine the relationship between driver and passenger usage, including adults and children in the rear seat.

Methods

Analyses were based on observational front and rear seat studies administered in parallel from 2016 to 2019. A statistically rigorous front seat project yielded weighted results among drivers and outboard passengers. A study of adults and children in the rear seat was based on a convenience sample of vehicles. Restraint usage results were presented as frequencies and proportions among occupants with known belt use, along with the 95% confidence interval for overall rates.

Results

Overall restraint usage rates averaged 90.9% in the front seat study and 81.1% in the rear seat sample. In vehicles with two front seat occupants and a belted driver, the proportion of belted passengers averaged 93.0% over four years. However, among unbelted drivers, only 41.6% of passengers were belted on average. In the rear seat study, an average of 82.7% were belted in vehicles driven by a restrained driver, differing for children (92.0%) versus adults (70.4%). Analysis of vehicles with an unbelted driver revealed an average of 45.0% of belted rear seat occupants, with a considerable difference for children (65.0%) compared with adults (21.0%).

Conclusions

Observational seat belt studies in Maryland in recent years have shown that, despite overall rates above 80%, passenger use in both the front and rear seats is associated with driver restraint use.

Disclosure statement

The authors report there are no competing interests to declare.

Additional information

Funding

The front and rear seat observational studies were funded by the MHSO. The front seat study was conducted as part of the NHTSA Annual Occupant Protection Use Survey and an independent data collection vendor was funded from outside of the organization. The MHSO was not directly involved in the data collection or analysis for the two studies.

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