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Attitudes on technological, social, and behavioral economic strategies to reduce cellphone use among teens while driving

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Version 2 2018-05-24, 14:42
Version 1 2018-04-13, 20:35
journal contribution
posted on 2018-05-24, 14:42 authored by M. Kit Delgado, Catherine C. McDonald, Flaura K. Winston, Scott D. Halpern, Alison M. Buttenheim, Claudia Setubal, Yanlan Huang, Kathryn A. Saulsgiver, Yi-Ching Lee

Objective: The majority of U.S. teens admit to handheld cellphone use while driving, an increasingly common cause of crashes. Attitudes toward novel cellphone applications and settings that block use while driving are poorly understood, potentially limiting uptake. We examined teens’ willingness to reduce cellphone use while driving and perceptions of potential strategies to limit this behavior.

Methods: Teen drivers (n = 153) aged 16–17 who owned smartphones and admitted to texting while driving completed an online survey. Survey instruments measured willingness to give up cellphone use and perceptions of technological and behavioral economic strategies to reduce cellphone use while driving. We used chi-square tests to test the hypothesis that willingness to give up certain types of cellphone use while driving and the perceptions of strategies to reduce cellphone use while driving would differ by self-reported frequency of texting while driving in the past 30 days (low [1–5 days] vs. high [6 or more days]).

Results: Most teens were willing or somewhat willing to give up reading texts (90%), sending texts (95%), and social media (99%) while driving. However, they were not willing to give up navigation (59%) and music applications (43%). Those who engaged in high-frequency texting while driving were more likely to say that they were not willing to give up navigation applications (73 vs. 44%, P <.001), music applications (54 vs. 32%, P <.001), and reading texts (15 vs. 4%, P =.029). Overall, the following strategies where rated as likely to be very effective for reducing texting while driving: gain-framed financial incentives (75%), loss-framed financial incentives (63%), group-based financial incentives (58%), insurance discounts (53%), automatic phone locking while driving (54%), e-mail notifications to parents (47%), automated responses to incoming texts (42%), peer concern (18%), and parental concern (15%). Those who engaged in high-frequency texting while driving were less likely to say that following strategies would be very effective: automated responses to incoming texts (33 vs. 53%, P =.016), peer concern (9 vs. 29%, P =.002), and parental concern (9 vs. 22%, P =.025). The strongest perceived benefit of cellphone blocking apps was decreasing distraction (86%). The predominant reason for not wanting to use this technology was not wanting parents to monitor their behavior (60%).

Conclusions: Promising strategies for increasing acceptance of cellphone blocking technology among teen drivers include automated screen locking and permitting hands-free navigation and music combined with behavioral economic incentives to sustain engagement.

Funding

Research reported in this publication was supported by the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institutes of Health under award number UL1TR000003 (Delgado, Lee) and the National Institute on Aging under award number P30AG034546 (Delgado) under pilot grants from the University of Pennsylvania Center for Health Incentives and Behavioral Economics; the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development under award number K23HD090272001 (Delgado); and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute under award number K12HL109009 (Delgado). The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the NIH.

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