Scottish Daily Mail

Children not safe to cross the road ‘until they’re 14’

- Daily Mail Reporter

CHILDREN are not safe crossing the road alone until they’re 14, research suggests.

Their visual judgment and motor skills have not fully developed before then, putting them at risk each time they reach a busy street, according to scientists.

A study using a simulated virtual traffic environmen­t showed up to 8 per cent of crossings by six-year-olds ended in accidents. Even those aged 12 were struck by vehicles 2 per cent of the time, and had to compensate for their lack of judgment by choosing bigger gaps in traffic. It was not until early adolescenc­e that youngsters got across without incident, according to the findings published in Experiment­al Psychology: Human Perception and Performanc­e.

Psychologi­st Professor Jodie Plumert, from Iowa University, said: ‘Some people think younger children may be able to perform like adults when crossing the street. That’s not necessaril­y the case on busy roads where traffic doesn’t stop.’

Crossing roads by foot seems easy for adults who take stock of traffic and calculate the time needed to get to the other side without being hit. Young children, on the other hand, may not have developed the fine motor skills to step into the street the moment a car has passed.

Professor Plumert said crossing with children was risky because they feel ‘the pressure of not wanting to wait’ combined with ‘these less-mature abilities’.

Parents should take precaution­s to judge if a traffic gap is large enough to cross safely with children, she advised.

About 1,500 pedestrian­s under the age of 15 are killed or seriously injured on Britain’s roads each year.

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