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Journal Article

Citation

Zhang C, Hong Y, Liu X, Li Y, Yang J. World Health Popul. 2010; 12(2): 34-42.

Affiliation

MPH, Department of Social and Behavioral Health, School of Rural Public Health, Texas A&M Health Sciences Center, 1266 TAMU, College Station, TX, 77843, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2010, Longwoods Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

21157196

Abstract

Objective: Millions of adolescents are killed or injured in traffic accidents on the world's roads each year, but data on traffic-injury prevention programs targeting adolescents are limited, especially from developing countries. The aim of the study was to evaluate the effectiveness of a traffic-injury prevention program targeting adolescents in China. Methods: We conducted a school-based traffic-safety intervention program with 2,759 students in two middle schools and two high schools in Beijing. An open-cohort, pre-post design with intervention and control groups was used to evaluate the intervention effect. Results: Compared with the control group, the intervention group reported a significant increase in knowledge and awareness of traffic safety and a decrease in self-reported unsafe traffic behaviours. Students in middle school and girls reported better intervention effects than their high school and male counterparts. Conclusion: This study suggests that school-based traffic-injury prevention programs may increase participants' knowledge of traffic signs and awareness of traffic safety issues. The high traffic mortality in China, particularly in Chinese adolescents, suggests that more age- and culture-appropriate traffic safety promotion programs are needed.


Language: en

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