Surprise Study Reveals: Kids May Be Twice as Safe Driving With Grandparents Than Parents
- Posted on July 18, 2011 at 8:15pm by
Billy Hallowell
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CHICAGO (The Blaze/AP) — Kids may be safest in cars when grandma or grandpa are driving instead of mom or dad, according to study results that even made the researchers do a double-take. These surprising results seem to push against stereotypes surrounding older Americans’ driving abilities and habits.
“We were surprised to discover that the injury rate was considerably lower in crashes where grandparents were the drivers,” said Dr. Fred Henretig, an emergency medicine specialist at Children‘s Hospital of Philadelphia and the study’s lead author.
Previous evidence indicates that car crashes are more common in older drivers, mostly those beyond age 65. The study looked at injuries rather than who had more crashes, and found that children’s risk for injury was 50 percent lower when riding with grandparents than with parents.
The results are from an analysis of State Farm insurance claims for 2003-07 car crashes in 15 states, and interviews with the drivers. The data involved nearly 12,000 children up to age 15.
Henretig, 64, said the study was prompted by his own experiences when his first grandchild was born three years ago.
“I found myself being very nervous on the occasions that we drove our granddaughter around and really wondered if anyone had ever looked at this before,” he said.
Reasons for the unexpected findings are uncertain, but the researchers have a theory.
“Perhaps grandparents are made more nervous about the task of driving with the ‘precious cargo’ of their grandchildren and establish more cautious driving habits” to compensate for any age-related challenges, they wrote.
The study was released online Monday in the journal Pediatrics.
Northwestern University Professor Joseph Schofer, a transportation expert not involved in the research, noted that the average age of grandparents studied was 58.
“Grandparents today are not that old” and don’t fit the image of an impaired older driver, he said. “None of us should represent grandparents as kind of hobbling to the car on a walker.”
Grandparents did flub one safety measure. Nearly all the kids were in car seats or seat belts, but grandparents were slightly less likely to follow recommended practices, which include rear-facing backseat car seats for infants and no front-seats. But that didn’t seem to affect injury rates. TIME writes:
Overall, the five years of crashes studied involved 217,976 children. Grandma and grandpa were driving in 10% of all car accidents (the rest occurred when parents were driving), and responsible for only about 7% of the total injuries to children under 16.
Overall, 1.05 percent of kids were injured when riding with parents, versus 0.70 percent of those riding with grandparents, or a 33 percent lower risk. The difference was even more pronounced — 50 percent — when the researchers took into account other things that could influence injury rates, including not using car seats, and older-model cars.
Kids suffered similar types of injuries regardless of who was driving, including concussions, other head injuries and broken bones.
The study does not include data on deaths, but Henretig said there were very few. It also lacked information on the types of car trips involved; for example, driving in busy city traffic might increase chances for crashes with injuries.
Schofer, the Northwestern professor, said other unstudied circumstances could have played a role. For example, grandparents could be less distracted and less frazzled than busy parents dropping their kids off at school while rushing to get to work or to do errands. Driving trips might be “quality time” for older drivers and their grandchildren, Schofer said.



















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nelan72
Posted on July 20, 2011 at 1:29pmGrandparents drive Buicks, Town Cars and Caddies. This might be the reason.
Report Post »VApatriot2
Posted on July 19, 2011 at 7:50amWe’ve learned to slow down and savor the moments!
Report Post »conservativewoman
Posted on July 18, 2011 at 11:34pmI do drive more cautiously when I have a passenger of any age. My grown children like to tease me about driving slow, but little do they know that I love the fast-lane when I am alone in the car.
Report Post »As a comfort to my children, I have been able to keep up the charade for quiet a few years. Hehe!
TomFerrari
Posted on July 18, 2011 at 11:08pmCus they go 12 mph?
lol
Report Post »cosette
Posted on July 18, 2011 at 10:14pm“The years teach much which the days never knew” – Ralph Waldo Emerson
Report Post »FlamingFartSyndrome
Posted on July 18, 2011 at 10:11pmProbably because kids drive with their parents 50 times as much as with their grandparents??
Report Post »Glenn in Virginia
Posted on July 18, 2011 at 9:31pmWell…duh!
We’re more mature. Why is anyone surprised?
Report Post »Restored One
Posted on July 18, 2011 at 9:40pmActually I have driven with my Mother in law (70) as well as my daughter and my 10 year old daughter asked me to take over at the next rest stop. I love my Mother in law, but when you are on I-80 (CA ) going onto (505) and a semi passes you in the slow lane, I get scared. Not to mention her tire sidewalls.
Report Post »TunaBlue
Posted on July 19, 2011 at 1:36amFifteen years ago, while I was driving from work to the store, and passing the street where I live, a car flies through the stop sign without yielding and almost t-bones me. I slowed down to let the car catch up and as the car pulls alongside I realize that it’s my Mom driving my other car. The problem is, she’s has my 11-year old daughter, and my 7-year old son in the car with her. It was the last time that G-ma got to drive my kids anywhere.
Report Post »Jenny Lind
Posted on July 18, 2011 at 8:46pmCould be we aren’t in as big a hurry?
Report Post »tgp42rhr
Posted on July 18, 2011 at 9:24pmMaybe we have a bit more time behind the wheel AND we actually learned to drive from our parents instead of Big Brothers Prisoner Training Camp….(public school to the trolls).
Report Post »loriann12
Posted on July 19, 2011 at 7:05amI agree with the way they’re taught to drive. I’m only 47 (technically old enough to be a grandparent if I had married at 18 instead of 25). Every time I get behind the wheel with flip flops, I hear my dad telling me never drive with flip flops because it could cause a wreck. I CAN’T not turn on my turn signal when I make a turn or lane change, force of habit. My dad, who is 79, says they should teach everyone to drive a straight shift, because it’s easier to move on to an automatic, than the other way around. I can drive a straight shift if I have to, but I stall getting out of first gear. I learned on an automatic.
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