Vehicle choice is particularly important for young drivers.
If your teenager has just
gotten a driver’s license, chances are he or she is looking forward to driving
to school this fall. It may be hard to imagine handing them keys to your brand
new car, but that may be the smartest vehicle to choose.
While getting a driver’s
license is an exciting rite of passage for teens, it can be enough to make a
parent frantic. The insurance Institute for
Highway Safety (IIHS) and the Insurance Information Institute (Ill) say there’s
something worried parents can do to protect their teens – choose a safe
vehicle.
Teenagers should drive vehicles
that reduce their chances of a crash and offer state-of-the-art protection in
case they do crash. The first years teenagers spend as drivers are very risky.
In fact, teen drivers have the highest death rates of any age group. In 1997
alone, more than 5,700 teenagers died in motor vehicle crashes, and many more
were left severely and permanently injured by crashes.
Teen drivers not only lack
experience, for many of them immature behavior, such as speeding and reckless
driving, is common. They may drive cautiously when mom or dad is in the car,
but when they’re on their own or with other teens, bad driving is often the
norm. Keep this in mind when you decide which vehicle your teen will drive and
avoid vehicles that encourage reckless driving.
Avoid choosing vehicles with a
performance image. Sports cars and other vehicles with performance features,
such as turbocharging, are likely to encourage speeding. Choosing a vehicle
with a more sedate image reduces the chances your teen will be in a speed-related
crash.
Don’t let your teen drive an
unstable vehicle. Sport utility vehicles, especially the smaller ones, are
inherently less stable than cars because of their higher centers of gravity.
Abrupt steering maneuvers – the kind that can occur when teens are fooling
around or overcorrecting a driver error – can cause rollovers in these less
stable vehicles. A more stable car would, at worst, skid or spin out.
Even if your teenager drives a
car with a sedate image, chances are still high that sooner or later he or she
will be in a wreck. This is why it’s also important to pick a vehicle that
offers good crash protection.
Don’t let your teen drive a
small vehicle. Small vehicles offer much less protection in crashes than larger
cars. However, this doesn’t mean you should put your child in the largest
vehicle you can find. Many mid and full size cars offer more than adequate
crash protection. Check out the safety ratings for mid size and larger cars.
Most of today’s cars are better
designed for crash protection than cars of 6 to 10 years ago. So avoid older
vehicles. For example, a newer mid size car with airbags would be a better
choice than an older, larger car without airbags. Before you make a final
choice on the car your teenager will drive, take advantage of the wealth of
consumer information available on car safety from the US Department of
transportation, Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, and Insurance
Information Institute. Check it out; it just may save your teen’s life.
For further information,
consult the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety or the Insurance
Information Institute web
sites.
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