WASHINGTON - Driving distractions, primarily by cell phones and
other electronic devices, are associated with up to 25 percent of U.S.
car crashes, according to a report released on Thursday.
The study by the Governors
Highway Safety Association (GHSA), a nonprofit group that works to
improve traffic safety, assessed research from more than 350 scientific
papers published since 2000.
It showed that drivers are
distracted up to half the time and that crashes caused by distractions
range from minor damage to fatal injury. Cell phone use raises the risk
of crashing, but texting is likely to increase crash risk more than cell
phone use.
"Despite all that has been written about driver distraction,
there is still a lot that we do not know," GHSA executive director
Barbara Harsha said in a statement.
"Clearly, more studies need to be done addressing both the scope of the problem and how to effectively address it."
The GHSA defined distracted driving and suggested measures for states and organizations to reduce distracted driving.
The report said laws banning
hand-held cell phones while driving reduced their use by roughly half
since they were first implemented, but cell phone use increased
subsequently.
There is no conclusive evidence
on whether hands-free cell phone use is less risky than hand-held use,
the report said. Evidence is also lacking on whether cell phone or
texting bans have reduced crashes or injuries.
The GHSA suggested a complete ban on cell phone use, hands-free
or not, for novice drivers, who are the highest-risk. It also
recommended a texting ban for all drivers.
Thirty U.S. states and the District of Columbia
have prohibited the use of all cell phones by novice drivers and 41
states and Washington, D.C. had prohibited texting by novice drivers.
Thirty four states and the District of Columbia have enacted texting
bans for all drivers. But the report said texting bans have proven
difficult to enforce.
Because the research and data
on these laws' effectiveness is not definitive, the report recommends
the 41 states without handheld cell phone bans hold off and monitor
existing laws before enacting their own.
The GHSA represents the state and territorial highway safety offices. Its members are appointed by their governors.
Source: Retuters
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