| Literature DB >> 28499425 |
Toni M Rudisill1, Motao Zhu2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cell phone use behaviors are known to vary across demographic sub-groups and geographic locations. This study examined whether universal hand-held calling while driving bans were associated with lower road-side observed hand-held cell phone conversations across drivers of different ages (16-24, 25-59, ≥60 years), sexes, races (White, African American, or other), ruralities (suburban, rural, or urban), and regions (Northeast, Midwest, South, and West).Entities:
Keywords: Cell phone; Driving; Epidemiology; Legislation
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28499425 PMCID: PMC5427616 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-017-4373-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Map of states included in 2008–2013 NOPUS survey. Whilst the survey is nationally representative, not all states were sampled. States shaded in white were not sampled; Alaska and Hawaii were also not sampled (not shown). States in any shade of grey were sampled. States shaded in dark grey had a universal hand-held cell phone use while driving ban implemented before or during the survey period. Illinois and New Hampshire had universal hand-held bans, which became effective after the study period (January 2014 and July 2015, respectively)
Characteristics of the roadside-observed drivers by hand-held phone status in 2008–2013 National Occupant Protection Use Surveya,b
| Driver not holding phone to ear or driver was using a head set ( | Driver holding phone to ears ( | Total ( | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Characteristic | N | (%)b | N | (%) | N | (%) |
| Age (years) | ||||||
| 16–24 | 29,799 | (11.7) | 2289 | (16.5) | 32,088 | (12.0) |
| 25–69 | 204,214 | (81.8) | 11,088 | (82.1) | 215,302 | (81.8) |
| > 70 | 16,096 | (6.5) | 187 | (1.4) | 16,283 | (6.2) |
| Sex | ||||||
| Male | 146,201 | (59.2) | 6383 | (47.6) | 152,584 | (58.6) |
| Female | 103,908 | (40.8) | 7181 | (52.4) | 111,089 | (41.4) |
| Race | ||||||
| White | 202,036 | (81.5) | 10,777 | (80.5) | 212,813 | (81.4) |
| Black | 22,361 | (8.3) | 1673 | (11.4) | 24,034 | (8.4) |
| Other | 25,712 | (10.3) | 1114 | (8.1) | 26,826 | (10.2) |
| Location | ||||||
| Urban | 42,447 | (16.7) | 2443 | (17.6) | 44,890 | (16.8) |
| Suburban | 148,174 | (57.0) | 8205 | (59.9) | 156,379 | (57.1) |
| Rural | 59,488 | (26.3) | 2916 | (22.5) | 62,404 | (26.1) |
| Geographic region | ||||||
| Northeast | 63,736 | (21.3) | 2873 | (16.6) | 66,609 | (21.1) |
| Midwest | 57,188 | (23.1) | 3165 | (22.5) | 60,353 | (23.1) |
| South | 66,420 | (28.5) | 4708 | (37.1) | 71,128 | (28.9) |
| West | 62,765 | (27.0) | 2818 | (23.8) | 65,583 | (26.9) |
| Seatbelt use | ||||||
| Yes | 214,358 | (85.6) | 11,059 | (81.6) | 225,417 | (85.4) |
| No | 35,751 | (14.4) | 2505 | (18.4) | 38,256 | (14.6) |
| Vehicle type | ||||||
| Passenger car | 127,209 | (49.6) | 6405 | (45.5) | 133,614 | (49.4) |
| Pick-up truck | 41,094 | (17.0) | 2237 | (17.3) | 43,331 | (17.0) |
| Van & SUV | 81,806 | (33.4) | 4922 | (37.2) | 86,728 | (33.6) |
| Cell phone subscriptions per 100 residentsc | 89 | 88 | 89 | |||
| Hand-held phone ban | ||||||
| Yes | 77,546 | (28.3) | 2132 | (14.5) | 79,678 | (27.6) |
| No | 172,563 | (71.7) | 11,432 | (85.5) | 183,995 | (72.4) |
| Universal texting ban | ||||||
| Yes | 124,598 | (50.8) | 5310 | (43.4) | 129,908 | (50.4) |
| No | 125,511 | (49.2) | 8254 | (56.6) | 133,765 | (49.6) |
| Young driver all cell phone ban | ||||||
| Yes | 130,264 | (55.4) | 6117 | (51.0) | 136,381 | (55.2) |
| No | 119,845 | (44.6) | 7447 | (49.0) | 127,292 | (44.8) |
| Other texting bans | ||||||
| Yes | 3281 | (1.7) | 225 | (1.5) | 3506 | (1.7) |
| No | 246,828 | (98.3) | 13,339 | (98.5) | 260,167 | (98.3) |
apercentages may not add up to 100% due to rounding
bpercentage is based on the weighted frequency
cthe average number of cell phone subscribers per 100 residents
The association between driver hand-held cell phone conversations and state legislation stratified by age group
| Characteristic | Total Na | Percent of drivers holding phone to earb | Crude Odds Ratio (95% Confidence Limit)c | Adjusted Odds Ratio (95% Confidence Limit)c |
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hand-held phone ban in 16–24 year old drivers | 0.7011 | ||||||
| No | 21,699 | 8.6 | 1.00 | (Referent) | 1.00 | (Referent) | |
| Yes | 10,389 | 4.0 | 0.42 | (0.34, 0.51) | 0.43 | (0.33, 0.55) | |
| Hand-held phone ban in 25–69 year old drivers | |||||||
| No | 150,269 | 6.3 | 1.00 | (Referent) | 1.00 | (Referent) | |
| Yes | 65,033 | 2.6 | 0.42 | (0.36, 0.48) | 0.39 | (0.33, 0.46) | |
| Hand-held phone ban in >70 year old drivers | |||||||
| No | 12,027 | 1.4 | 1.00 | (Referent) | 1.00 | (Referent) | |
| Yes | 4256 | 0.4 | 0.67 | (0.23, 1.93) | 0.64 | (0.24, 1.68) | |
aThe total number of drivers with the specified characteristic by presence/absence of hand-held cell phone use while driving legislation
bPercentage of drivers who were observed engaging in hand-held cell phone conversations by presence/absence of hand-held cell phone use while driving legislation
cAll crude and adjusted odds ratios were calculated using logistic regression for complex surveys; adjusted models controlled for year, sex, race, urbanicity of location, seatbelt use, vehicle type, presence of universal texting ban (binary), presence of young driver all cell phone ban (binary), non-universal texting while driving law (binary), and the number of cell phone subscriptions per 100 residents
dThe p-value presented is from the interaction term which assessed the relationship between the sub-group and hand-held CPWD ban
The association between driver hand-held cell phone conversations and state legislation stratified by sex
| Characteristic | Total Na | Percent of drivers holding phone to earb | Crude Odds Ratio (95% Confidence Limit)c | Adjusted Odds Ratio (95% Confidence Limit)c |
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hand-held phone ban in male drivers | <0.0001 | ||||||
| No | 106,969 | 4.9 | 1.00 | (Referent) | 1.00 | (Referent) | |
| Yes | 45,615 | 2.4 | 0.50 | (0.43, 0.58) | 0.47 | (0.40, 0.55) | |
| Hand-held phone ban in female drivers | |||||||
| No | 77,026 | 8.0 | 1.00 | (Referent) | 1.00 | (Referent) | |
| Yes | 34,063 | 3.0 | 0.36 | (0.31, 0.43) | 0.34 | (0.28, 0.41) | |
aThe total number of drivers with the specified characteristic by presence/absence of hand-held cell phone use while driving legislation
bPercentage of drivers who were observed engaging in hand-held cell phone conversations by presence/absence of hand-held cell phone use while driving legislation
cAll crude and adjusted odds ratios were calculated using logistic regression for complex surveys; adjusted models controlled for year, age, race, urbanicity of location, seatbelt use, vehicle type, presence of universal texting ban (binary), presence of young driver all cell phone ban (binary), non-universal texting while driving law (binary), and the number of cell phone subscriptions per 100 residents
dThe p-value presented is from the interaction term which assessed the relationship between the sub-group and hand-held CPWD ban
The association between driver hand-held cell phone conversations and state legislation stratified by race
| Characteristic | Total Na | Percent of drivers holding phone to earb | Crude Odds Ratio (95% Confidence Limit)c | Adjusted Odds Ratio (95% Confidence Limit)c |
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hand-held phone ban in White drivers | 0.3036 | ||||||
| No | 153,950 | 6.0 | 1.00 | (Referent) | 1.00 | (Referent) | |
| Yes | 58,863 | 2.6 | 0.43 | (0.37, 0.50) | 0.37 | (0.32, 0.45) | |
| Hand-held phone ban in African American drivers | |||||||
| No | 18,334 | 8.0 | 1.00 | (Referent) | 1.00 | (Referent) | |
| Yes | 5700 | 3.7 | 0.53 | (0.40, 0.69) | 0.62 | (0.45, 0.87) | |
| Hand-held phone ban in Other drivers | |||||||
| No | 11,711 | 6.4 | 1.00 | (Referent) | 1.00 | (Referent) | |
| Yes | 15,115 | 2.4 | 0.38 | (0.29, 0.51) | 0.43 | (0.30, 0.60) | |
aThe total number of drivers with the specified characteristic by presence/absence of hand-held cell phone use while driving legislation
bPercentage of drivers who were observed engaging in hand-held cell phone conversations by presence/absence of hand-held cell phone use while driving legislation
cAll crude and adjusted odds ratios were calculated using logistic regression for complex surveys; adjusted models controlled for year, sex, age, urbanicity of location, seatbelt use, vehicle type, presence of universal texting ban (binary), presence of young driver all cell phone ban (binary), non-universal texting while driving law (binary), and the number of cell phone subscriptions per 100 residents
dThe p-value presented is from the interaction term which assessed the relationship between the sub-group and hand-held CPWD ban
The association between driver hand-held cell phone conversations and state legislation stratified by geographic region
| Characteristic | Total Na | Percent of drivers holding phone to earb | Crude Odds Ratio (95% Confidence Limit)c | Adjusted Odds Ratio (95% Confidence Limit)c |
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hand-held phone ban in Northeast drivers | 0.0003 | ||||||
| No | 35,126 | 5.9 | 1.00 | (Referent) | 1.00 | (Referent) | |
| Yes | 31,483 | 2.6 | 0.53 | (0.39, 0.73) | 0.47 | (0.30, 0.72) | |
| Hand-held phone ban in Midwestern drivers | |||||||
| No | 60,353 | 5.2 | 1.00 | (Referent) | 1.00 | (Referent) | |
| Yes | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | |
| Hand-held phone ban in Southern drivers | |||||||
| No | 62,644 | 7.0 | 1.00 | (Referent) | 1.00 | (Referent) | |
| Yes | 8484 | 3.7 | 0.54 | (0.44, 0.64) | 0.50 | (0.38, 0.66) | |
| Hand-held phone ban in Western drivers | |||||||
| No | 25,872 | 7.0 | 1.00 | (Referent) | 1.00 | (Referent) | |
| Yes | 39,711 | 2.5 | 0.32 | (0.26, 0.39) | 0.31 | (0.25, 0.38) | |
Abbreviations: N/A not applicable; no state had a hand-held cell phone use while driving ban in this region effective during the study period
aThe total number of drivers with the specified characteristic by presence/absence of hand-held cell phone use while driving legislation
bPercentage of drivers who were observed engaging in hand-held cell phone conversations by presence/absence of hand-held cell phone use while driving legislation
cAll crude and adjusted odds ratios were calculated using logistic regression for complex surveys; adjusted models controlled for year, age, sex, race, urbanicity of location, seatbelt use, vehicle type, presence of universal texting ban (binary), presence of young driver all cell phone ban (binary), non-universal texting while driving law (binary), and the number of cell phone subscriptions per 100 residents
dThe p-value presented is from the interaction term which assessed the relationship between the sub-group and hand-held CPWD ban
Effective dates and U.S. Census region of states sampled in the 2008–2013 National Occupant Protection Use Survey, United States
| State | Effective dates of universal hand-held cell phone use while driving bans | U.S Census Region |
|---|---|---|
| Alabama | NA | South |
| Arkansas | NA | South |
| California | 07/01/08 | West |
| Colorado | NA | West |
| Connecticut | 10/01/05 | Northeast |
| Florida | NA | South |
| Georgia | NA | South |
| Illinoisa | NA | Midwest |
| Indiana | NA | Midwest |
| Kentucky | NA | South |
| Maine | NA | Northeast |
| Maryland | 10/01/10 | South |
| Massachusetts | NA | Northeast |
| Michigan | NA | Midwest |
| Minnesota | NA | Midwest |
| Mississippi | NA | South |
| Missouri | NA | Midwest |
| North Carolina | NA | South |
| North Dakota | NA | Midwest |
| Nebraska | NA | Midwest |
| Nevada | 01/01/12 | West |
| New Hampshirea | NA | Northeast |
| New Jersey | 07/01/04 | Northeast |
| New Mexico | NA | West |
| New York | 11/01/01 | Northeast |
| Ohio | NA | Midwest |
| Oklahoma | NA | South |
| Oregon | 01/01/10 | West |
| Pennsylvania | NA | Northeast |
| South Carolina | NA | South |
| Texas | NA | South |
| Utah | NA | West |
| Washington | 07/01/08 | West |
| West Virginia | 07/01/12 | South |
| Wisconsin | NA | Midwest |
Abbreviations: NA not applicable; no universal hand-held ban exists
a: Illinois and New Hampshire implemented hand-held cell phone bans after 2013