A randomized trial of behavioral interventions yielding sustained reductions in distracted driving

Distracted driving is responsible for nearly 1 million crashes each year in the U.S. alone, and a major source of driver distraction is handheld phone use. We conducted a randomized, controlled trial to compare the effectiveness of interventions designed to create sustained reductions in handheld us...

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Hauptverfasser: Ebert, Jeffrey, Xiong, Aria (Ruiying), Khan, Neda, Abdel-Rahman, Dina, Leitner, Aaron C, Everett, Bill, Gaba, Kristen, Fisher, William J, McDonald, Catherine C., Winston, Flaura K., M. Rosin, Roy, Volpp, Kevin G., J. Barnett, Ian, Wiebe, Douglas J., Halpern, Scott D., Delgado, M. Kit
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Distracted driving is responsible for nearly 1 million crashes each year in the U.S. alone, and a major source of driver distraction is handheld phone use. We conducted a randomized, controlled trial to compare the effectiveness of interventions designed to create sustained reductions in handheld use while driving (NCT04587609). Participants were 1,653 Progressive® Snapshot® usage-based auto insurance customers ages 18-77 who averaged at least 2 minutes/hour of handheld use while driving in the month prior to study solicitation. They were randomly assigned to one of five arms for a 10-week intervention period. Arm 1 (control) got education about the risks of handheld phone use, as did the other arms. Arm 2 got a free phone mount to facilitate handsfree use. Arm 3 got the mount plus a commitment exercise and tips for handsfree use. Arm 4 got the mount, commitment, and tips plus weekly goal gamification and social competition. Arm 5 was the same as Arm 4, plus offered behaviorally designed financial incentives. Post-intervention, participants were monitored until the end of their insurance rating period , 25-65 days more. Outcome differences were measured using fractional logistic regression. Arm 4 participants, who received gamification and competition, reduced their handheld use by 14.2% relative to control (p < .0001); Arm 5 participants, who additionally received financial incentives, reduced their use by 24.8% (p < .0000001). Both groups sustained these reductions until the end of their insurance rating period.
DOI:10.6084/m9.figshare.25984198