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Journal Article

Citation

Kedikoglou S, Belechri M, Dedoukou X, Spyridopoulos T, Alexe DM, Pappa E, Stamou A, Petridou E. Scand. J. Public Health 2005; 33(1): 42-49.

Affiliation

Department of Hygiene and Epidemiology, Athens University Medical School, Athens 115027, Greece.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2005, Associations of Public Health in the Nordic Countries Regions, Publisher SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1080/14034940410028334

PMID

15764240

Abstract

AIMS: The results of an infant car-restraint loan scheme and evaluate its cost-effectiveness are presented. METHODS: The intervention programme was initiated in 1996. Car-restraints, donated by manufacturers, were lent for a six-month period to eligible prospective parents for a modest fee. Specially trained health visitors performed in-person interviews with the participating parents. The data were collected and recorded on a pre-coded questionnaire. Cross-tabulations and multiple logistic regression were performed to analyse the data. Subsequent purchase of a next-stage car restraint, suitable for older children (up to four years of age) was considered as a proxy measure of the success of the programme. This information, along with the detailed operational and financial data collected during the implementation phase of the programme, was used to develop a model to assess the cost-effectiveness of a countrywide intervention. RESULTS: During a two-year period 188 families participated in a survey. On return of the infant car restraint, 92% of the participants reported proper use of the device and 82% had already purchased the second-stage car restraint. Parental age, gender, or educational status was not predictive of positive parental road safety practices for the newly born, whereas history of parental seat-belt use--as a proxy of personal road safety behaviour--was positively correlated with the likelihood of purchasing a second-stage car-restraint device. The cost-effectiveness ratio varies between 418.00 euro and 3,225.00 euro per life-year saved, depending on whether the modest administrative fee is considered. CONCLUSIONS: On the basis of plausible assumptions, a loan programme of infant car-restraints was shown to be particularly cost effective.

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