340 likes | 436 Views
Characteristics of Chinese Drivers Attending a Mandatory Training Course Following Licence Suspension Dr Judy Fleiter Postdoctoral Research Fellow Co-authors: WATSON, Barry; GUAN, Manquan ; DING, Jingyan , XU Cheng . Collaboration.
E N D
Characteristics of Chinese Drivers Attending a Mandatory Training Course Following Licence Suspension Dr Judy Fleiter Postdoctoral Research Fellow Co-authors: WATSON, Barry; GUAN, Manquan; DING, Jingyan, XU Cheng
Collaboration • Postdoctoral Research Fellowship from Australia’s National Health & Medical Research Council to promote Australia-China road safety research • Zhejiang Police College, Hangzhou, China (2 years) • CARRS-Q, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia (2 years)
Overview • Background – Demerit point system and driver retraining in Zhejiang Province • Method • Findings • Conclusion and Recommendations
Background • Traffic law enforcement relies on penalties and sanctions: • Vehicle (eg Impoundment) • Person (eg. Remedial programs, Detention) • Licence (eg. Suspension, Disqualification) • Commonly administered by Demerit points system
Demerit point systems • Vary between countries • Offences have predetermined # points assigned • Often, more severe offences associated with greater number of points • Licence holders accrue (or lose) points • Threshold (predetermined limit) is reached within certain timeframe • Licence suspended or disqualified for set time van Schagen & Machata, 2012
Variations (1) • Threshold commonly 12-18 points (Bulgaria = 39) • New Zealand - 12 points over 2 years • Australia - 12 points over 3 years • China - 12 points over 1 year • Parts of EU, 1 pt/offence; 3 offences = suspension • Other places, 6 or 8 points per offence • Different thresholds for different drivers Styles et al, 2009; van Schagen & Machata, 2012
Variations (2) • Novice drivers • Queensland: part of Graduated Driver Licensing system, Learner and Provisional Licence holders have 4 points/year • Professional drivers • Italy: Offences committed when driving professionally tallied in separate driving record • Repeat offenders • Prolonged periods of suspension for recidivists in some places • Double demerits at particular times (eg holidays)
China • Rapid recent motorisation • Significant road trauma burden • Large increase in • newly licensed drivers • private car ownership • Major challenge to manage record numbers of 1st time car owners and novice drivers
Retraining after Licence Suspension (1) • 12 points in 1 year = licence suspension for 1 month • Mandatory 1 wk retraining • own expense • Must pass examination to regain licence • Course administered & run by Traffic Police Department, Public Security Bureau • Low cost (RMB 51 in Zhejiang Province) • Average annual income = RMB35,731 Urban; RMB13,071 Rural
Retraining after Licence Suspension (2) • Offences leading to licence loss include: • Speeding • Unlicensed driving • Vehicle overloading • Red light running • Alcohol-impaired driving • Driving wrong way on a one way street
Retraining after Licence Suspension (3) • If Course done twice in 1 year, suspension period doubles (2 months) • If suspended 3rd time, must redo novice driver training (more extensive, takes approx 2 months) • Recent revision to regulation: • Accrue 10 demerit points in 1 year, can apply to undertake 2 day course to regain 4 points • Can only do this once
Little is known about effectiveness of demerit point schemes and driver education in China……
Research Aim Pilot study to examine basic information about participants of a driver retraining course to gain baseline data
Zhejiang Province • South east coast of China • Hangzhou is capital city • Population 54+ million (end 2011) • Registered vehicles 6.5+ million (end 2011) • Valid licences: 12.1+ million • 22.36% of population, end 2011 • In 2011, 1.38 million new licences issued • 17% increase on previous year. Zhejiang Traffic Management Department, 2012; Zhejiang Public Security Bureau, 2012
Method • 2 visits by research team to Driver Retraining Centre in Hangzhou • Anonymous questionnaire completed ‘in class’ in presence of research team • Responses not available to training staff • 94% response rate • 239 participants
Sample Characteristics • 87% male • Higher than Provincial level of licence holders • Approx 2/3 male • Private vehicle ownership = 83.3% • Mean age 35 years (SD=8.7, Range 21-60)
Annual Income • Zhejiang Average annual income = RMB35,731 Urban; RMB13,071 Rural
Hours Driven/Week Mean = 18.06 hours/week, SD=14.4, Range 1 – 86 hours
# Infringements in Last Year • Mean = 4.6 infringements (SD=3.2, Range 2-18) • 33% reported 5+ infringements • 4.3% reported 10 + infringements • Most commonly reported violations...
Avoiding Legal Penalty? • Received Infringements but didn’t pay them in the last year? • 24% Yes • Number of infringements not paid
Certainty of Receiving Penalty if… • Caught by speed camera • 76% sure they would receive penalty • Caught by traffic police officer • 82.6% sure they would receive penalty • Then asked if previously used specific strategies to avoid detection or penalty
Strategies to Avoid Penalty Percentage reporting ‘Sometimes to Always’
Crash Involvement (1) • Previous year • M = 0.53 crashes (SD=0.9; Range 0-5) • 14.5% reported >1 crash • No information on ‘at fault’ crashes • Length held licence examined to see if difference in crashes
Crash Involvement (2) • Four groups created according to length of time licensed • Novice drivers (<2 years licensed) • 2-5 years licensed • 6-10 years licensed • 11+ years licensed • Significant difference found between Novice & 11+ • Novice drivers reported more crashes • No other differences found
Conclusions (1) • Driver retraining courses vary across international jurisdictions • Some show +ve results when evaluated • No evaluation data available for China • Little known about effectiveness of driver education processes in China Delhomme, Grenier, & Kreel, 2008; Senserrick, Yu, Wei, Stevenson, & Ivers, 2011
Conclusions (2) • Research conducted approx. 1 year after serious penalties increased for Drunk driving DWI in China (May 2011) • Encouraging that only 2.2% reported DWI (0.08+ BAC) in previous year • Lesser offence (DUI – 0.02-0.08 BAC) reported by two thirds of sample • Suggests that ongoing effort needed to educate about risks of DUI • Half sample reported speeding offences. Work still needed to promote speed limit compliance
Conclusions (3) • Integrity of penalty system is critical to effective traffic law enforcement • Effective deterrence relies on high perceived risk of apprehension and certainty of receiving penalty • 1/3 reported avoiding penalty in previous year • Various strategies reported • Encouragingly, majority reported not engaging in avoidance behaviours • Important to strengthen integrity of system to reduce opportunities for punishment avoidance
Conclusions (4) • Limitations acknowledged: • Self-report data – no link to official violations database • No conclusions on effectiveness of demerit point scheme or retraining course – data not available • Use of retraining course shows willingness to improve road safety situation in China • Future research could build on this work to establish baseline data for comparison to assess effectiveness of retraining courses.
20th International Council on Alcohol, Drugs & Traffic Safety Conference Registration now open! www.t2013.com
Thank you. Any comments/questions? j.fleiter@qut.edu.au Mark your Diaries! International Council on Alcohol, Drugs and Traffic Safety Conference (2013) 25-28 August 2013, Brisbane Registrations now open! http://t2013.com CRICOS No. 00213J