Skip to main content

Concerns for young drivers causing crashes

Concern is being expressed for the safety of young drivers. Statistics both from the US and the UK reveal the shockingly high risk of young drivers being involved in crashes. They also reveal that young drivers are a danger not only to themselves, but to other road users as well as the occupants of their own vehicles. The latest figures from the UK show that 2,088 young drivers and passengers aged from 17-24 were killed and seriously injured in just one year. Although the data shows that drivers aged fro
May 24, 2016 Read time: 3 mins
Concern is being expressed for the safety of young drivers. Statistics both from the US and the UK reveal the shockingly high risk of young drivers being involved in crashes. They also reveal that young drivers are a danger not only to themselves, but to other road users as well as the occupants of their own vehicles.

The latest figures from the UK show that 2,088 young drivers and passengers aged from 17-24 were killed and seriously injured in just one year. Although the data shows that drivers aged from 17-19 make up just 1.5% of those holding a UK licence, they account for 9% of fatal crashes.

Meanwhile data compiled by the 4796 AAA in the US shows that car crashes are the leading cause of deaths of teenagers in the country. In 2013, there were 988 deaths of drivers aged from 15-19 in the US. The AAA data also reveals that for every teenaged driver killed in a crash, on average two other people are also killed either in their vehicle or another. The AAA points out that the inexperience and lack of maturity of teenaged drivers combines to make them at particular risk, and also a risk to others.

Road safety body 3963 Brake in the UK has studied the topic also and come up with broadly similar results for young drivers in the UK. Brake’s research shows too that many people in the UK believe restrictions should be placed on young drivers to help minimise the risks, such as having graduated licensing or a zero-tolerance drink-drive limit for novice drivers.

According to Brake’s research, half of those asked think that there should be a restriction on car engine sizes for new drivers, and more than a third of people think that a newly qualified driver should lose their licence if they break any traffic laws during their first year on the road.

Some 79% of those questioned said they think there should be a minimum time frame for learning to drive, and almost two thirds (62%) think that should be at least six months.

Some 75% of those asked in Brake’s survey said they think there should be a requirement for a minimum number of taught hours before learner drivers are allowed to take their practical test. Half of those questioned (50%) said they think people should have at least 35 hours of driving lessons before taking their on-the-road test.

Research shows that the combination of youth and inexperience puts younger drivers at high risk. Their inexperience means they have less ability to spot hazards, and their youth means they are particularly likely to take risks. In this way, crash risk not only reduces over time with experience but is also higher for those who start driving at a younger age.

However there is evidence that shows changes to how people learn to drive and restrictions on newly qualified drivers can have a huge impact on road safety. Research for the UK’s 5432 Department for Transport (DfT) shows the large number of young drivers involved in crashes as a public health risk An analysis of DfT figures suggests that 4,471 casualties and £224 million pounds could be saved in in the UK/year if a graduated licencing system were brought in for novice drivers aged 17-19.

There is a broad improvement in safety too though. Statistics from the AAA in the US shows that the number of teenagers killed in road crashes is 56% of the rate in 1994, while the number of crashes has been halved.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Zipping up road lanes – with Barrier Systems
    September 10, 2018
    QMB has a Lindsay Road Zipper on duty near Montreal. World Highways deputy editor David Arminas climbed aboard As vice president of Canadian barrier specialist QMB, based in Laval, Quebec, Marc-Andre Seguin is sanguine about the future for moveable barriers. On the one hand, it looks good. The oft-stated advantage of moveable barriers is that the systems are cheaper to install than adding a lane or two to a highway or bridge. Directional changes to lanes can boost volume on a road without disrupting tra
  • Road safety concern for Europe highlighted
    March 8, 2022
    A road safety concern for Europe has been highlighted by the ETSC.
  • Safety for Sri Lanka
    April 19, 2012
    Sri Lanka is struggling to deal with a road safety problem that is crippling and killing large numbers of its citizens. In the past three decades over 40,000 people have been killed and 68,440 seriously injured in 1,120,848 road mishaps in Sri Lanka according to official reports. Unreported accidents mean that the actual figures may be far higher however. Young people face particular safety problems in the country and in 2011 225 schoolchildren were killed in road accidents while 4,100 others critically inj
  • Speed awareness programme reduces repeat offending
    February 27, 2012
    The satellite navigation leads me along a series of minor roads until it chirps, "You have arrived at your destination." And there is the sports centre I've been looking for, so I indicate, turn into the entrance and squeeze my car into the last narrow parking space available. I'm here to attend an innovative road safety programme being carried out in the UK on speed awareness. Drivers caught just over the speed limit have the option of points on their license, and subsequent increases in insurance costs, o