Adolescent Balloon Analog Risk Task and Behaviors that Influence Risk of Motor Vehicle Crash Injury.
Autor: | Vaca FE; Yale School of Medicine, Department of Emergency Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut Yale School of Medicine, Child Study Center, New Haven, Connecticut., Walthall JM; Yale School of Medicine, Child Study Center, New Haven, Connecticut., Ryan S; Yale School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, New Haven, Connecticut., Moriarty-Daley A; Yale School of Nursing, New Haven, Connecticut., Riera A; Yale School of Medicine, Pediatric Emergency Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut., Crowley MJ; Yale School of Medicine, Child Study Center, New Haven, Connecticut., Mayes LC; Yale School of Medicine, Child Study Center, New Haven, Connecticut. |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Zdroj: | Annals of advances in automotive medicine. Association for the Advancement of Automotive Medicine. Annual Scientific Conference [Ann Adv Automot Med] 2013; Vol. 57, pp. 77-88. |
Abstrakt: | Risk-taking propensity is a pivotal facet of motor vehicle crash involvement and subsequent traumatic injury in adolescents. Clinical encounters are important opportunities to identify teens with high risk-taking propensity who may later experience serious injury. Our objective was to compare self-reports of health risk behavior with performance on the Balloon Analog Risk Task (BART), a validated metric of risk-taking propensity, in adolescents during a clinical encounter. 100 adolescent patients from a hospital emergency department and adolescent health clinic completed a computer-based survey of self-reported risk behaviors including substance use behaviors and behaviors that influence crash involvement. They then completed the BART, a validated laboratory-based risk task in which participants earn points by pumping up a computer-generated balloon with greater pumps leading to increased chance of balloon explosion. 20 trials were undertaken. Mean number of pumps on the BART showed a correlation of .243 (p=.015) with self-reported driver/passenger behaviors and attitudes towards driving that influence risk of crash injury. Regression analyses showed that self-reports of substance use and mean number of pumps on the BART uniquely predict self-reports of behaviors influencing the risk of crash injury. The BART is a promising correlate of real-world risk-taking behavior related to traffic safety. It remains a valid predictor of behaviors influencing risk of crash injury when using just 10 trials, suggesting its utility as a quick and effective screening measure for use in busy clinical environments. This tool may be an important link to prevention interventions for those most at-risk for future motor vehicle crash involvement and injury. |
Databáze: | MEDLINE |
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