eScholarship Repository eScholarship Repository California Digital Library
eScholarship > ITS > TSC > Paper UCB-TSC-RR-2003-05

TSC Papers

TSC Website

Policies

Search TSC

Submit a Paper

Notify me of new papers

institute_logo

Institute of Transportation Studies
UC Berkeley Traffic Safety Center
University of California, Berkeley

TSC Papers  •  TSC Website  •  Policies  •  Search  •  Submit a Paper

Traffic Safety in Communities of Color
Toni Gantz, Prevention Institute
Enrique J. De La Garza, U.C. Berkeley
David R. Ragland, U.C. Berkeley
Larry Cohen, Prevention Institute

Funded by the California Office of Traffic Safety through the Business, Transportation and Housing Agency

Download the Paper (242 K, PDF file) - November 18, 2003 Tell a colleague about it.
Printing Tips: Select 'print as image' in the Acrobat print dialog if you have trouble printing.

ABSTRACT:

Over the past half-century in the United States, medical advances, improvements in road and vehicle design, and traffic safety efforts have all helped in reducing traffic-related injury and death. However, research suggests that among the US population, certain ethnic groups, namely African Americans,* American Indians, and Latinos, continue to face higher traffic-related risk. Among all US ethnic groups, motor-vehicle injury is a leading contributor to unnecessary injury and premature death. Improving traffic safety outcomes among these groups could help reduce their overall health disparities.

This paper examines the available research on how traffic safety issues specifically affect higher-risk communities of color, demonstrates that significant disparities in traffic safety outcomes exist between these groups and whites, and explores possible reasons for these differences. The paper focuses on three traffic safety issues that are associated with poorer outcomes among these communities of color: seat belt use, impaired driving, and pedestrian safety.

This paper highlights major traffic safety needs within specific communities of color, and concludes that ongoing data collection and analysis are necessary to provide a clearer, more complete picture of the issue as well as to inform interventions and efforts targeted toward these communities. More research is needed to understand past traffic safety successes (such as the decreases in impaired driving or increases in seat belt use that have occurred across ethnic groups) so that these successes can be extended. Similarly, evaluations of current interventions are greatly needed, particularly for comprehensive and longitudinal studies. Finally, there is also a need for research that distinguishes the effects of ethnicity versus the effects of socio economic status on traffic safety outcomes.

SUGGESTED CITATION:
Toni Gantz, Enrique J. De La Garza, David R. Ragland, and Larry Cohen, "Traffic Safety in Communities of Color" (November 18, 2003). UC Berkeley Traffic Safety Center. Paper UCB-TSC-RR-2003-05.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/its/tsc/UCB-TSC-RR-2003-05

PREVIOUS VERSIONS:
Click a date to download that version.
August 01, 2003

 
bar
Open Archives Initiative eScholarship is a service of the California Digital Library bepress