Distracted Driving
Here’s Why You Should pay Attention3,450
Number of fatalities in America in 2016 due to distracted driving (NHTSA)
Kate Morgan remembers the incident vividly. She was driving to her parents’ house in suburban New Jersey, alone, with her cell phone on her lap.
It was around 10 p.m. “I’m not even sure exactly who I was texting, but it definitely wasn’t important,” recalls Morgan, a Pennsylvania-based journalist who was a teenager at the time. But she clearly recollects what happened next: The road beneath her curved, while she continued to drive straight. By the time she looked up, just a couple of seconds later, her car was hurtling onto someone’s lawn and crashing into a mailbox—which went flying over the hood of her station wagon.
She was uninjured but horribly shaken. “On an average afternoon, the front lawns on that street are full of kids. I know how bad it could have been,” says Morgan (who paid the homeowner for the damage).
“I don’t text and drive anymore.”
By The Numbers
Stories like Morgan’s—many of which end far more tragically—are all too common these days. The statistics are grave and alarming: Distracted driving was the cause of 3,450 American deaths in 2016, as well as 391,000 injuries in 2015, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA).
Yet many people continue the practice. A study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) found that American drivers engage in distracting activities more than 50 percent of the time they’re behind the wheel—effectively doubling their crash risk.
That risk translates into accidents. The same study concludes that 4 million of the 11 million crashes that occur in the U.S. every year would potentially be avoided if we could eliminate distraction.
“Make no mistake,” says Maureen Vogel, a representative for the National Safety Council (NSC). “Distracted driving is an epidemic.”
3,450
Number of fatalities in America in 2016 due to distracted driving (NHTSA)
36%
Potential amount of crashes in the U.S. each year that could be avoided if we eliminate distraction (PNAS)
36%
Potential amount of crashes in the U.S. each year that could be avoided if we eliminate distraction (PNAS)
“DISTRACTED DRIVING IS AN EPIDEMIC.”
—MAUREEN VOGEL, National Safety CouncilDISTRACTING THINGS WE ALL DO
It’s not just cell phones that can distract us. All of these (perfectly legal) activities have caused accidents—take extra caution.Quiz:
Do You Know The Facts?
Q: What’s the most common distracting behavior of drivers at a stoplight?
REVEAL ANSWER
A: Eating & drinking
Source: IIHS
Q: Reaching for, answering, or dialing a cell phone increases the risk of a crash (or near crash) by how much?
REVEAL ANSWER
A: Any of them triples your risk.
Source: IIHS
Q: How many teens who text say they have texted while driving?
REVEAL ANSWER
A: One in three. It increases their risk of a crash 23 times.
Source: NHTSA
Q: Which passengers cause teens to exhibit the riskiest behaviors? Family, friends, or no passengers?
REVEAL ANSWER
A: Friends, especially when there are two or more.
Source: NHTSA
Video: Avoiding Your Cell Phone While Driving
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More: Managing Emotions While Driving
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More: Managing Passengers While Driving
“THERE’S A DANGEROUS SORT OF CULTURAL COMPLACENCY THAT’S OVERTAKEN US, ESPECIALLY WHEN IT COMES TO USING OUR DEVICES.”
FIGHT THE DISTRACTION
Before you start driving, put the phone on silent and stow it out of reach; or give it to a co-pilot.
FIGHT THE DISTRACTION
Any extreme emotion can cause tunnel vision. If you’re feeling angry, sad or stressed, don’t get behind the wheel. If you’re already driving, find a safe place to pull over and park until you feel better.
FIGHT THE DISTRACTION
Assign seats and roles to your passengers before getting in the car, to minimize potential distractions. Always secure pets in a crate or a backseat restraint.
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“If you had been reading this while driving 55 mph, you would have traveled the length of a football field.”
Rosetta Powell says,
I Never text or answer yhe phone while driving. I have completed the AARP
defensive drivers course.
Roderick Mosher says,
Thank you
Janusz Waclawek says,
Thank You Geico this publication will help me to be a better driver.
Louis A. Cruz, Esq says,
Good info. Never on cell when driving.
Big peril: Driving too close to car in front; being too close at stops; and many drivers fail to use turn signals.
Definite distractions.
Lisa says,
Thank you! Great learning material!
patricis says,
Excellent presentation on distracted driving. I learned a lot.
Barbara Simper says,
Good information. Thanks for making the effort to combat this problem.
Molly Turner says,
Awesome information. Will this come out every month?
Joe says,
A good reminder to pay attention when driving. Thanks
Bob Volin says,
How does all of this reconcile with the tendency to gadgetize the newer line of cars.
rj says,
When you ask, “How Did We Get Here?”: Maybe you should consider the influence of marketing, such as the distraction-demanding layout of this web page!
Russell Watford says,
What about just plain bad driving. Many people just do not know the right techniques or choose not to follow them. Unfortunately we are in a world where we all have distractions (where is that switch on our bodies to turn everything off) but just bad driving is epidemic. there are 2 points in your story I will point out: Distracted driving was the cause of 3,450 American deaths in 2016 and drunk driving and forgoing seat belts …………… still accounted for more than 20,000 fatalities in 2016. I am NOT trying to encourage distracted driving but compare the numbers. 3450 vs. 20,000 hmmmmm. Maybe some focus still needs to be put on the bigger number? Just saying.
Charlie MATT says,
ROAD RAGE THOUGHT. I’ve learned this: if someone pulls out in front of you or cuts you off just let them go, they are apparently in a rush so will not delay you anyway.
Molly Turner says,
Or just a bad driver. Some people just don’t care and are in a rush to get no where.
Unfortunately, these days you have to pay attention because many individuals carry weapons and they are rushing away from other things, like crimes.
stanley s mccoy says,
i don’t have a cell phone
Chip Jaubert says,
Thank you for the information and the stats.