Disregard for simple road-safety practices such as the use of seat belts, helmets and child-restraint systems is causing Jamaican children to die, according to recent findings from research on child road safety commissioned by the JN Foundation and The United Nations Children Fund (UNICEF).
“Speeding and riding without a motorcycle helmet, as well as transporting a child without proper child restraints, are among the most frequent traffic violations involving children,” said Dr Earl Bailey, lead researcher on the JN Foundation/UNICEF Child Road Safety Assessment Report.
Bailey was speaking at the official launch of the research data, which was held at The University of the West Indies Regional Headquarters, Mona campus, last Wednesday.
He said that in 2017, some 32,365 traffic tickets were issued for exceeding the speed limit. Tickets issued for driving without seat belts totalled some 113,677.
The researcher further divulged that transporting a child without a child restraint resulted in 3,604 tickets. Tickets to motorcyclists riding without protective helmets totalled approximately 2,728.
“Fines are not the answer, there must be behavioural and structural changes,” Bailey advised as he pointed out that “over the last 40 years, traffic fines have failed to curb road fatalities and crashes”.
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