NTL Record

Title 1998 Motor Vehicle Occupant Safety Survey: Volume 3: Child Safety Seat Report
Record ID 26004
Personal Name
Creator
Block, Alan W.
Source 1 v. (various pagings) : ill.
Corporate Creator Schulman, Ronca, & Bucuvalas (Firm)
Corporate
Contributor
United States. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Office of Research and Traffic Records
Publisher United States. Department of Transportation. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
Publication Date 20000700
Language English
Abstract The 1998 Motor Vehicle Occupant Safety Survey was the third in a series of biennial national telephone surveys on occupant protection issues conducted for the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). Data collection was conducted by the firm Schulman, Ronca & Bucuvalas, Inc., a national survey research organization. The survey used two questionnaires, each administered to a randomly selected national sample of about 4,000 persons age 16 and older. Interviewing began November 5, 1998 and ended January 12, 1999. This report presents the survey findings pertaining to child restraint use. Detailed information on the survey methodology, as well as copies of the questionnaires, are contained in a separate NHTSA report ("1998 Motor Vehicle Occupant Safety Survey, Volume One: Methodology Report"). The survey selected a subgroup of drivers to ask detailed questions about use of car seats. These were primarily parents and others who lived with children under the age of 6. This group of "parents/caregivers" tended to report that the (referent) child either used a car seat "all the time" (71%) or else never used a car seat (22%). Almost all infants reportedly used car seats "all of the time" if they weighed under 20 pounds (99%) or were under 2 years of age (98%). Discontinuation of car seat use by most children occurred when the child was 3 or 4 years old and exceeded 40 pounds. The most frequent reasons given for non-use of car seats among part time users were that the child did not like the seat (31%), the seat was unavailable (30%), or the child was only going to be in the car a short time (29%). If children never used car seats, it was because they were deemed too big (84%) and were using a seat belt (94%). Most parents/caregivers (76%) said they were aware of booster seats, but 21% had not heard of them and 3% were unsure. Among those who had heard of booster seats, 30% had concerns about their safety and another 7% were unsure. /Abstract from report summary page/
Rosap ID dot:1676
Rosap URL https://rosap.ntl.bts.gov/view/dot/1676
TRT Terms Child restraint systems; Highway safety; Surveys; Statistics; Parents; Attitudes; Behavior
Classification NTL - SAFETY AND SECURITY - Vehicle Design;
NTL - SAFETY AND SECURITY - SAFETY AND SECURITY;
NTL - PLANNING AND POLICY - Surveys;
NTL - REFERENCES AND DIRECTORIES - Statistics
Geographical
Coverage
United States
TRIS Online
Accession No
810977
Report Number DOT-HS-809-182; NTIS-PB2001102435
Availability NHTSA - Behavioral Safety Research
Resource type Statistical Report
URL https://ntlrepository.blob.core.windows.net/lib/26000/26000/26004/DOT-HS-809-182.pdf
Format PDF
Database NTL Digital Repository