Motorcycle licensure, ownership, and injury crash involvement

Am J Public Health. 1991 Feb;81(2):172-6. doi: 10.2105/ajph.81.2.172.

Abstract

The interrelationships among motorcycle licensure, ownership, and injury crash involvement were investigated in a sample of 2,723 motorcycle drivers severely or fatally injured in California in 1985-86. Owners of motorcycles in such crashes ("driver-owners") were less likely to have valid licenses than a random sample of motorcycle owners who had not been in crashes (42 vs. 57 percent). Thirty-three percent of the crash-involved drivers had valid motorcycle driver's licenses; 39 percent were operating motorcycles they did not own ("driver-nonowners"). Driver-nonowners were less likely to be validly licensed than driver-owners (20 percent vs. 44 percent). The licensing rate of crash-involved driver-nonowners was 15 percent if the owner was also unlicensed. Rates of valid licensure were lowest among the youngest drivers. Virtually no crash-involved driver-nonowners under age 21 were licensed in cases in which the owner was also young and unlicensed.

MeSH terms

  • Accidents, Traffic* / prevention & control
  • California
  • Health Behavior*
  • Humans
  • Motorcycles*
  • Ownership
  • Wounds and Injuries / etiology*