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Texting while driving, To do or NOT to do? By: Jennifer M. Richards

Texting while driving, To do or NOT to do? By: Jennifer M. Richards. Distracted Driving!. Is an act of which you are engaged in anything other then driving, which can lead to distraction and increase your risk for an accident

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Texting while driving, To do or NOT to do? By: Jennifer M. Richards

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  1. Texting while driving, To do or NOT to do?By: Jennifer M. Richards

  2. Distracted Driving! • Is an act of which you are engaged in anything other then driving, which can lead to distraction and increase your risk for an accident • Examples could be: Texting, eating, grooming, reading maps, using a GPS/Navigation system, talking to other passengers, using other electronic devices

  3. Main Types of distracted driving • Visual — because you are taking your focus off the road using your eyes to text • Manual — taking your hands off the wheel to press buttons causes you to physically be distracted • Cognitive — Instead of focusing on driving a vehicle, you are distracted by thinking of the conversation you are sending or receiving.

  4. Who is texting and driving? • Men • Women • Adults • Teenagers • 18 to 34 years of age

  5. What can happen to those who text and drive? • According to the AAOS, people that are driving a moving vehicle and texting on a cellular device risk being in a • accident • harm others on the road • severe orthopedic traumas • or death

  6. How many accidents are caused • Nearly 6,000 people died in 2008 in crashes involving a distracted driver, and more than half a million were injured. • According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration in 2009: 20% of injury crashes involved reports of distracted driving. • Of those killed in distracted-driving-related crashed, 995 involved reports of a cell phone as a distraction

  7. Texting & Driving Statistics • Drivers who use hand-held devices are four times as likely to get into crashes serious enough to injure themselves. (Source: Insurance Institute for Highway Safety) • Of all cell phone related tasks – including talking, dialing, or reaching for the phone – texting while driving is the most dangerous.

  8. …Con’t Statistics • 48% of young Americans from 12-17 say they've been in a car while the driver was texting • 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.

  9. References - American Academy of Orthapedic , S. (2010, April 1). Texting while driving is a distraction – don. Retrieved from http://www6.aaos.org/about/pemr/psa/2010/2010prints_donttext.cfm - NHTSA, . Department of Transportation, Highway Traffic Safety. (2011). Policy statement and compiled faqs on distracted driving . Washington,DC: - Vasquez, E. (2010, June 18). Adults as likely to text while driving as teens, study says. CNN Tech, p. 1.

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