
Most teen drivers fasten their seat belts when they get behind the wheel. But troubling new data show that teen passengers are far less likely to buckle up.
The finding, to be published in the September issue of the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, shows a significant gap in public education efforts to reduce teen driving deaths. While many new state laws have resulted in extra limits for teen drivers, little attention has been paid to the teens in the car who aren't behind the wheel.
Students who made A's and B's in school were more likely to buckle passenger belts than C students, but there was still a tremendous difference in seat-belt use compared to drivers.
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