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Teens and Distracted Driving

Teens and Distracted Driving. Introduction. 80% of crashes and 65% of near crashes involved some sort of driver distraction. Teens are 4x more likely to be in a wreck then drivers over age 30. Introduction. Motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of death for 16-20 year olds.

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Teens and Distracted Driving

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  1. Teens and Distracted Driving

  2. Introduction • 80% of crashes and 65% of near crashes involved some sort of driver distraction. • Teens are 4x more likely to be in a wreck then drivers over age 30.

  3. Introduction • Motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of death for 16-20 year olds. • 5,500 fatalities annually. 450,000 injuries annually.

  4. Introduction • 14% of all deaths due to motor vehicle accidents involve a teenage driver. • 53% of the time teen driver deaths occur on weekends.

  5. SurveyPlease answer Yes or No on your responders. • Have you ever spoken on a cell phone while driving? • Have you ever sent text messages while driving? • Have you ever had a conversation with a friend while driving?

  6. SurveyPlease answer Yes or No on your responders. • Do you listen to the radio while driving? • Do you adjust the station on your radio or change the CD while driving? • Do you drive when you are tired? • Do you eat and drive?

  7. SurveyPlease answer Yes or No on your responders. • Girls – do you put on makeup while driving? • Do you have a GPS system that you use while driving? • Do you listen to your iPod while driving?

  8. DWT: Driving while texting How many of you would consider writing a paper or watching a movie on your laptop while driving? • Texters in the US sent 158 billion messages last year. Up 95% from 2005. • 13% of teens admit to texting while driving.

  9. DWT: Driving while texting • The average teen takes their eyes off of the road 10% of the time. That jumps to 40% when a teen is texting while driving. • Texting means a 400% increase in the amount of time that your eyes are off the road.

  10. DWT: Driving while texting • 140% increase in lane violations while texting. • Many states are now banning texting while driving. Fines are as high as $101 per text in some states.

  11. Driving While Using Your Cell Phone • Talking on your cell phone while driving is the most common distraction drivers face. • In many states it is already illegal for teenagers and adults to use their cell phones while driving. • In a recent survey, 73% of drivers surveyed admitted to using their cell phones while driving. • Drivers who use their cell phones while driving are 4x more likely to be in an accident.

  12. DWE: Driving While Eating What do you think the Top 10 most dangerous foods to eat in the car are? • 10 – Chocolate. Whatever you touch gets sticky, driver’s instinctive reactions are to clean and that is distracting. • 9 – Soft Drinks. Open containers can cause a lack of driver concentration when spilled.

  13. DWE: Driving While Eating,continued • 8 – Jelly and Cream Filled Doughnuts. Drivers become more focused on the messy jelly oozing out than driving. • 7 – Fried Chicken. Greasy hands are a distraction as driver’s try to clean them. Plus, grease is almost impossible to clean off of a steering wheel.

  14. Driving While Eating, continued • 5 – Hamburgers. Dripping condiments, special sauces and greasy meat drip out of the bun and onto your shirt. The $5 Hamburger becomes $500 - $5,000 worth of repairs. • 6 – BBQ. BBQ sauce is messy. Remember: If it drips, don’t eat it while driving.

  15. Driving While Eating, continued • 4 – Chili. Anything containing chili such as a chili dog is dangerous. Steering chili to your mouth while steering your car requires more dexterity than humans possess. • 3 – Tacos. This food can disassemble itself. One good road bump and the seat of your car looks like a salad bar.

  16. Driving While Eating, continued • 2 – Hot soups. Eating soup while driving is like attempting a juggling act. • 1 – Coffee. Coffee spills are the worst because drivers try to make immediate clean up while still driving. Hot coffee can also cause serious burns that divert a driver’s focus away from the road.

  17. Sleepy Driving

  18. Sleepy Driving… • 100,000 reported crashes per year as a result of drowsiness. 1,500 of them result in deaths. • 55% of those crashes were caused by drivers under the age of 25. • Some states are requiring that sleep deprived drivers that cause accidents that kill someone be charged with vehicular homicide.

  19. Sleepy Driving,continued • Fall asleep for 2.5 seconds going 70 MPH and you just traveled the length of a football field while sleeping. • Being awake for 18 hours has the same effect on your driving as being legally drunk.

  20. How Tired is Too Tired?: Are you at risk for a sleepy driving crash? Factors to consider. • 6 Hours of sleep or less triples your risk. • Pull over and take a nap if you: • 1. Have trouble keeping your eyes open. • 2. Are frequently blinking or yawning. • 3. Are feeling restless or irritable. • 4. Are having trouble remembering the last few miles you’ve driven.

  21. Driving While Impaired

  22. Driving While Impaired… • 28% of drivers age 15-20 that were in accidents had been drinking. • 39% of all fatal crashes involved alcohol.

  23. Driving While Impaired…continued • During the last 30 days, 28.5% of high school students admitted to riding in a car driven by someone who had been drinking alcohol. • Driving while impaired slows your reaction time.

  24. Driving While Impaired…continued If you are driving while impaired it can end up on your permanent record. This affects your ability to: • Go to college. • Receive financial aid or scholarships for college. • Get a job. • Get your own car insurance as an adult.

  25. Distracted Driving: Changing the Radio, Talking to your Friends, Putting on Makeup, etc. • Driver inattention is the leading factor in crashes. • 45% of teen drivers killed in car accidents have a friend in the car with them. • Changing the radio, talking to your friends and/or putting on makeup etc. all take your attention off the road.

  26. Distraction Activity • Can you really pay attention while distracted? • Let’s find out.

  27. Discussion • Results – • Analysis – • Conclusion – • How can we become more attentive drivers?

  28. Wrap-up • Reducing or eliminating as many distractions as possible can reduce your risk of being in a motor vehicle accident.

  29. Wrap-up • The person calling your cell phone can wait, the radio doesn’t need to be changed until you reach a stop light, your makeup looks great, and you can catch up with your friends when you arrive at your destination.

  30. Don’t become a statistic.

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