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David C. Schwebel
Researcher at University of Alabama at Birmingham
Publications - 395
Citations - 123784
David C. Schwebel is an academic researcher from University of Alabama at Birmingham. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Injury prevention. The author has an hindex of 72, co-authored 358 publications receiving 93565 citations. Previous affiliations of David C. Schwebel include University of California, Los Angeles & University of Iowa.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Racial disparities in fifth-grade sun protection: Evidence from the Healthy Passages study.
Christina M. Correnti,Christina M. Correnti,David J. Klein,David J. Klein,Marc N. Elliott,Emir Veledar,Mona Saraiya,Alyna T. Chien,Alyna T. Chien,David C. Schwebel,Sylvie Mrug,Susan R. Tortolero,Paula M Cuccaro,Mark A. Schuster,Mark A. Schuster,Mark A. Schuster,Suephy C. Chen,Suephy C. Chen +17 more
TL;DR: Using Healthy Passages data for fifth‐graders, this work set out to determine sunscreen adherence in these children and investigated factors related to sunscreen performance.
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How Personality and Reward Relate to Automobile Drivers' Judgments of Affordances Using Their Own Vehicles
TL;DR: In this paper, a study of motor vehicle safety factors that are based in ecological theory was conducted to test factors that might influence motor vehicle drivers' judgments of passability and fitability affordances.
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Transportation-Related Safety Behaviors in Top-Grossing Children's Movies from 2008 to 2013.
TL;DR: Although many safe transportation behaviors were portrayed, the film industry continues to depict unsafe behaviors in movies designed for pediatric audiences, suggesting a need for the filmindustry to continue to balance entertainment and art with modeling of safe behavior for children.
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Sibling supervision: A risk factor for unintentional childhood injury in rural Uganda?
TL;DR: Sibling supervision is a widespread practice in rural Uganda, and supervisee injuries are common, so interventions to improve supervision may reduce child injury risk.
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Data on unsafe riding behaviors among 1960 shared bicycle riders in urban China
TL;DR: The extent of shared bicycle riding risks for shared-bicycle riders in urban China is quantified through a WeChat-based online survey, with a valid sample of 1960 respondents, and complete frequency data from riders concerning eight unsafe riding behaviors is reported.