Targeting young drivers? Need to re-think Saffron, David
Publication details: Sydney 2001Description: 7 sSubject(s): Online resources: Notes: Road Safety Research, Policing and Education Conference Proceedings, 2001, Sydney Abstract: Many publicity campaigns target young drivers. Close targeting of a group can reduce a campaign’s impact. There is a trade-off between - the fewer people impacted, and - a greater impact on each group member. Despite their higher risk, young drivers are a minority of fatality involved drives. Demographic changes imply a further decline in this proportion. Target groups should be set so as to optimise resource use, which means a close interaction between those who define a road safety problem (based on crash data and research data) and those who design countermeasures.Road Safety Research, Policing and Education Conference Proceedings, 2001, Sydney
Many publicity campaigns target young drivers. Close targeting of a group can reduce a campaign’s impact. There is a trade-off between - the fewer people impacted, and - a greater impact on each group member. Despite their higher risk, young drivers are a minority of fatality involved drives. Demographic changes imply a further decline in this proportion. Target groups should be set so as to optimise resource use, which means a close interaction between those who define a road safety problem (based on crash data and research data) and those who design countermeasures.