Laws, Education Not Enough To Curb Distracted Driving
Admit it or not, most of us are guilty of having fiddled with a cell phone while behind the wheel. As
"Keeping an Eye on Distracted Driving," appears in the latest issue of the
Drs. Coben and Zhu note that in 2003, cell phone use while driving was estimated to cause over 300,000 total injuries annually, including 2,600 fatalities. The numbers increased 22 percent between 2005 and 2009. The problem is expected to worsen in coming years, despite efforts to curtail distracted driving.
"Young drivers are at greatest risk, both because they use cell phones more than older drivers, and because they are inexperienced behind the wheel," Coben said. "I see this problem only getting worse unless more is done to prevent it."
Zhu agrees.
"I think the problem will be getting worse before starting to level off, since many young drivers have grown up with mobile devices, and texting is very popular among them," he said. "Still, I do believe there will be a point where these numbers will level off. It will take long-term and concerted efforts, as have been employed with encouraging seat belt use and discouraging drunk driving."
"Solving this problem will require new approaches," he said. "My hope is that ten years from now, there will be systems built into all automobiles that disable all hand-held devices when the car is in motion, allow only hands-free phone usage and convert incoming text messages to voice and outgoing voice commands to text using hands-free voice recognition technology."
Though all these technological innovations are possible, Coben and Zhu strongly believe the federal government should take greater action, including setting new safety standards requiring the development and implementation of this technology. Their shared opinion is that combining new technology with improved safety standards has the potential to save lives, and that failure to act will result in the continued loss of thousands of lives each year to distracted driving-related crashes.
To read the JAMA article in its entirety, visit: http://jama.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=1660390
To hear an interview with Dr.
TNS MT93 130307-4233956 61MarlizTagarum
| Copyright: | (c) 2013 Targeted News Service |
| Source: | Targeted News Service |
| Wordcount: | 542 |



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