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Text Messaging Car Accident

trev0006

Freshman Member
Offline
Public service massage is way to graphic.


Video - Text Messaging Car Accident


here are the facts.


Teen Driver Cell Phone and Texting Statistics


•Despite the risks, the majority of teen drivers ignore cell phone driving restrictions.
•Talking on a cell phone while driving can make a young driver's reaction time as slow as that of a 70-year-old.
•56% of teenagers admit to talking on their cell phones behind the wheel, while 13% admit to texting while driving. (Note: Because this information was given voluntarily by teens, actual cell phone use numbers may be much higher.)
•48% of young Americans from 12-17 say they've been in a car while the driver was texting.
•52% of 16- and 17-year-old teen drivers confess to making and answering cell phone calls on the road. 34% admit to text messaging while driving.
•In 2007, driver distractions, such as using a cell phone or text messaging, contributed to nearly 1,000 crashes involving 16- and 17-year-old drivers.
•Over 60% of American teens admit to risky driving, and nearly half of those that admit to risky driving also admit to text messaging behind the wheel.
•Each year, 21% of fatal car crashes involving teenagers between the ages of 16 and 19 were the result of cell phone usage. This result has been expected to grow as much as 4% every year.
•Almost 50% of all drivers between the ages of 18 and 24 are texting while driving.
•Over one-third of all young drivers, ages 24 and under, are texting on the road.
•Teens say that texting is their number one driver distraction.


Cell Phones, Text Messaging, and Car Accident Information for All Drivers


•Talking on a cell phone causes nearly 25% of car accidents.
•One-fifth of experienced adult drivers in the United States send text messages while driving.
•In 2008 almost 6,000 people were killed and a half-million were injured in crashes related to driver distraction.
•At any given time during daylight hours in 2008, more than 800,000 vehicles were driven by someone using a hand-held cell phone.
•4 out of every 5 accidents (80%) are attributed to distracted drivers. In contrast, drunk drivers account for roughly 1 out of 3 (33%) of all accidents nationally.
•Texting while driving is about 6 times more likely to result in an accident than driving while intoxicated.
•People who text while driving are 23% more likely to be in a car accident.
•A study of dangerous driver behavior released in January 2007 by Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co. found that of 1,200 surveyed drivers, 73% talk on cell phones while driving. The same 2007 survey found that 19% of motorists say they text message while driving.
•In 2005, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration found that 10% of drivers are on handheld or hands free cell phones at any given hour of the day.
•A study conducted by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety Motorists found that motorists who use cell phones while driving are four times more likely to get into crashes serious enough to injure themselves.
•In 2002, the Harvard Center for Risk Analysis calculated that 2,600 people die each year as a result of using cellphones while driving. They estimated that another 330,000 are injured.
•According to the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, drivers talking on cell phones are 18% slower to react to brake lights. They also take 17% longer to regain the speed they lost when they braked
•Of cell phone users that were surveyed, 85% said they use their phones occasionally when driving, 30% use their phones while driving on the highway, and 27% use them during half or more of the trips they take.
•84% of cell phone users stated that they believe using a cell phone while driving increases the risk of being in an accident.
•The majority of Americans believe that talking on the phone and texting are two of the most dangerous behaviors that occur behind the wheel. Still, as many as 81% of drivers admit to making phone calls while driving.
•The number of crashes and near-crashes linked to dialing is nearly identical to the number associated with talking or listening. Dialing is more dangerous but occurs less often than talking or listening.
•Studies have found that texting while driving causes a 400% increase in time spent with eyes off the road.



Study Reveals the Dangers of Texting While Driving
The following statistics come from a study conducted by the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute (VTTI):



•Of all cell phone related tasks - including talking, dialing, or reaching for the phone - texting while driving is the most dangerous.
•Teen drivers are four times more likely than adults to get into car crashes or near crash events directly related to talking on a cell phone or texting.
•A car driver dialing a cell phone is 2.8 times more likely to get into a crash than a non-distracted driver.
•A driver reaching for a cell phone or any other electronic device is 1.4 times more likely to experience a car crash.
•A car driver talking on their phone is 1.3 times more likely to get into an accident.
•A truck driver texting while driving is 23.2 times more likely to get into an accident than a trucker paying full attention to the road.
•A truck driver dialing a cell is 5.9 times more likely to crash.
•A trucker reaching for a phone or other device is 6.7 times more likely to experience a truck accident.
•For every 6 seconds of drive time, a driver sending or receiving a text message spends 4.6 of those seconds with their eyes off the road. This makes texting the most distracting of all cell phone related tasks.
 
trev0006 said:
Public service massage is way to graphic.

Hey if I was getting a back rub while driving I'd have an accident too :jester:
 
As innocent people continue to be maimed/killed by "distracted drivers", one might assume that judges will become hardened by such behavior and throw the bloody book at the perpetrators.

No excuse for it, the whole world knows how totally dangerous it is.

Scary. I watch out for drivers yakking on cell phones, putting on makeup, eating, etc., and give them a VERY wide berth while driving.

Just crazy . . . :yesnod:
 
trev0006 said:
Public service massage is way to graphic.


Video - Text Messaging Car Accident

As graphic as that video is, it should be mandatory that ALL driver's see it. That's a powerful video that might hopefully drive the message home about how distracting texting, and to some extent cell phone use is while driving.

Just today, going home from work, there was someone in front of me that almost crashed into a concrete median barrier and then a couple of hundred feet later ran his tires off the road for no apparent reason. I'd almost bet that he/she was texting. I just backed off into the right lane.
 
I'm sorry, but everything in our PC world is so sanitized now so we don't upset a few people. That video should be graphic, because the results surely are.

It's not just texting it's talking on the phone; hands free doesn't fix that as it's the act of being immersed in the conversation. Some people don't even have the concentration necessary to drive when the radio or CD is on.
 
We had a double-whammy here in central Illinois last fall.

Drunk driver who was texting.....ran into a tree/fence....killed his 5 year old daughter.

He goes to trial this month.
 
TRDejaVuIt's not just texting it's talking on the phone; hands free doesn't fix that as it's the act of being immersed in the conversation. Some people don't even have the concentration necessary to drive when the radio or CD is on.[/quote said:
Dude, I can't even talk on the phone and post or email at the same time.


I can type, it's the talking that gets me.


My buddy gets so mad...
 
TRDejaVu said:
I'm sorry, but everything in our PC world is so sanitized now so we don't upset a few people. That video should be graphic, because the results surely are.

I actually expected it to be MORE graphic, based on the comments. There should have been a description of the aftermath....who died, who was permanently maimed, the months and years of therapy, etc., etc., etc.

The results of an incident like that ARE brutal.....the PSA should be too.
 
We have a no cell phone law in our area......... but guess what, the police can't
stop you for it if they see you on a phone. they have to pull you over
for other reasons.... just doesn't make any sense.
Why have a law if it can not be enforced !!!!!
 
I fully agree with all above statements. My good friend lost her husband, and got pretty banged up about 2 months ago in a car accident. The cause of why the young man driving the Cadillac SUV crossed the shoulder line, and struck my friends parked car with its 4-ways on, without ever applying his brakes is still under investigation. One of the holdups is waiting for the guys phone records. seems the cell phone companies are swamped with requests for them. Hmmmmmm.
 
A couple of weeks ago,while in Norfolk,Virginia,
my Granddaughter & I were waiting at a crosswalk,wait-
ing for the light to change.
A girl in a new Mini ran the light,& I noticed
that she was talking on her cell phone.I wish I had
something to throw at her car.

- Doug
 
Bumper sticker I once saw: "Honk if you love Jesus. Text while driving if you want to meet him."
 
Basil said:
Bumper sticker I once saw: "Honk if you love Jesus. Text while driving if you want to meet him."

Ain't that the truth!
 
Basil said:
Bumper sticker I once saw: "Honk if you love Jesus. Text while driving if you want to meet him."

Hay...... i want one of those !!!
 
Just ~where~ are all those MADD zealots? Hmmm???

MATT (Motorists Against Texting Teens) oughta be the next "movement" to lobby for some 'No Tolerance' legal action. Put the same levies on distracted driving as have been enacted regarding alcohol. Enforce them.

Saw a woman in traffic using one of those eyelash curling thingies the other day. Totally out of control. It may be a good thing I don't drive some beat up SUV...
She'd be less one eye, my insurance would go up. :madder:
 
Doc,
its times like that I wish I had a crew served "attitude adjuster" on the truck.
 
Yeah, I consider puttin' th' turret back on Diesela sometimes, too. :smirk:
 
DrEntropy said:
It may be a good thing I don't drive some beat up SUV... She'd be less one eye, my insurance would go up. :madder:

Know zactly how you feel, wife is getting tired of me threatening to buy an old Catalina just for that purpose. Don't you just love it when they come careening around a corner into your lane while babbling on a cell phone trying to steer with one hand? I almost got taken out by a city bus, the driver was one handing it.
 
mehheh. My "threat" for years has been a big ol' Caddy, welded angle-iron to the corners of th' bumpers for "can openers". :devilgrin:
 
It's not just texting it's talking on the phone; hands free doesn't fix that as it's the act of being immersed in the conversation. Some people don't even have the concentration necessary to drive when the radio or CD is on.[/quote]

Assuming "Our cell phones are out of the equation, The Lucas systems in our cars almost guarantees us to be the least technologically distracted drivers on the roadways. I don't think recharging a cell phone is a good idea, if we have a long way to travel.
 
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