Cell Phone Driving Dangers


For drivers, danger on the phone
A study calls phone use risky as driving drunk.
By Tom Avril
Inquirer Staff Writer
Drivers who talk on cell phones may be just as dangerous as those who drink.
That's the sobering conclusion of a study published yesterday by University of Utah researchers who monitored 40 men and women on a driving simulator.
Drivers using hands-free phones were no better than those with the handheld variety, confirming previous studies. That suggests New Jersey's ban on cell-phone driving, which allows hands-free use, is only partly effective.


The findings, published in the journal Human Factors, take a swipe at a popular pastime that is taken for granted by millions of multitasking drivers.
At any given moment during the day, 10 percent of drivers are talking on their wireless devices, according to a 2005 estimate by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.


Bad idea, said psychologist Frank A. Drews, one of the Utah study's authors.
"It's kind of almost unpredictable how they are driving," Drews said.
When using cell phones, drivers had slower reaction times and more accidents, and they drove inconsistently, sometimes approaching other cars and then falling back, he said.


Cellular industry officials acknowledge that phones can be distracting but said they can be used sensibly. It's unfair to single out phones, said John Walls, a spokesman for CTIA-The Wireless Association, a Washington-based trade group.
"I think there are just a multitude of distractions that are out there," Walls said. "And by focusing on just one, you're creating a false sense of security among people."
In another recent study, by the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute, some other distractions - such as applying makeup and reading - were found to be much more risky.
In the Utah study, both cell-phone use and alcohol caused participants to "drive" more erratically over the simulated 24-mile course, but in different ways.


Cell-phone users were involved in more "accidents," and they took about 70 milliseconds longer to react when the car on the video screen in front of them hit the brakes - a delay during which a car moving at 55 m.p.h. would travel more than five feet on the road.


When the drivers were drunk - with a blood-alcohol content of 0.08, the legal threshold for intoxication - they followed other cars more closely and they braked 23 percent more forcefully, a potential problem for motorists behind them. They also had twice as many close calls - defined as stopping less than four seconds away from a collision - as they did when sober.


The participants were given a mixture of vodka and orange juice. Their level of drunkenness - equivalent to four drinks in an hour on an empty stomach for a 170-pound man - was verified with a monitor.


By one key measure, cell-phone users were even worse than drunken drivers.
When talking on the phone, the drivers had three accidents, but when they were drunk, they had none. The drivers also had no accidents when they were sober and not using phones.


Researchers said they were surprised that the drunken drivers were accident-free. They urged people not to misconstrue the results as suggesting that drunken driving was safe.
The authors speculated that the lack of accidents may have been due to the fact that the study was conducted in the morning, when participants were well rested.
Because the drunken drivers followed too closely and had more close calls, they would be expected to have accidents in the long run, Drews said.


Drunken drivers in the Utah study were barely illegal, while in real life, they may be much more impaired, said Anne McCartt, vice president for research at the nonprofit Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. Crash rates start to rise with blood-alcohol levels below 0.08, and they climb steadily after that, she said.
The Utah researchers presented preliminary findings three years ago and are publishing them now after further analysis and peer review.


Besides New Jersey, the only states to ban driving while talking on a handheld cell phone are Connecticut and New York. Washington and some other communities have also banned it, including Conshohocken and West Conshohocken. A statewide ban passed the Pennsylvania Senate this week, sponsored by Sen. Joe Conti (R., Bucks), but a House bill has not been approved.


In New Jersey, police issued at least 7,000 tickets to drivers who were talking on cell phones during the first six months of 2005, the most recent time period for which data are available.


The real number of offenses is likely much higher, in part because charges are often negotiated away in municipal court, said Roberto Rodriguez, director of the state Division of Highway Traffic Safety.


Told about the new study, Rodriguez said he wasn't surprised that researchers found no difference between drivers who used handheld phones and those who used the hands-free variety legal in New Jersey.
"You are not cognizant of what is going on around you" during a phone conversation, he said. "That is the danger."


New Jersey Sen. Martha Bark (R., Burlington), a sponsor of the cell-phone law, said the exemption for the hands-free variety was a compromise to get an unpopular measure passed.


Bark said that she got her own hands-free car phone only at her children's urging and that she uses it sparingly.
"I do not talk on my phone," Bark said. "I call my office and say, 'I'm going to be five minutes late. Goodbye.' "
Drews, the Utah researcher, said he never phones while driving. His reason is more than just safety.


"I enjoy my quiet time," he said.




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In New Jersey, police issued at least 7,000 tickets to drivers who were talking on cell phones during the first six months of 2005, the most recent time period for which data are available.


There've been multiple times recently that I've almost been run off the road by people on hand-held phones. Once, even when there was a cop behind the woman who almost side-swiped me!
And more often than not, drivers on the hand-held are ignored by police when driving.

Den 19 years ago
California is trying to pass the 'hands free' bill too, which won't come soon enough for me. I'm an offender, in fact this morning on the way to work I was trying to reach my daughter who had called me earlier (unusual for her to do so early, which scared me and was the only reason I kept trying to reach her, even in the car) But normally I don't drive and talk because I know for a fact I can drive for a couple miles at least and then have no idea that I did :S
ROzbeans 19 years ago
I'm an offender. I call my mother and put her on speaker phone the second Catherine and I get in the car in the morning. It's like having company and Mike will tell you I talk to my mother 3-4 times a day sometimes. I just enjoy her company. I dont even listen to the radio anymore - especially since SOMEONE TOOK MY IPOD TO A FOREIGN COUNTRY.

/cough
blazyn 19 years ago
<3 bmw phone in my car..when i get in my car i plug my phone in when i get a call i hit a button on my steering wheel and talk!
Vex 19 years ago
wow. if any of you ever hit my car while driving on the phone, you better be wearing a full body suit of majorly padded armor... or dont stop and get out.

I swear to fucking GOD if i EVER get into a car accident cause the other fucker was on the phone, i would be punching face like blazyn's sig.
Vex 19 years ago
and do people really apply makeup and read while driving?

why dont they stick a fucking screwdriver in a power outlet while they are at it.. ?
Sarah 19 years ago
Yes, people do Vex. There is a woman I've passed several times who spplies freaking mascara, using the rearview mirror while driving.
Vex 19 years ago
Kaytana
Yes, people do Vex. There is a woman I've passed several times who spplies freaking mascara, using the rearview mirror while driving.


and people think IM weird for not wanting to leave my house.

$25k vehicle people. the more its NOT on the road, the less chance i may have to pay for repairs, or get a new one altogether.
Sarah 19 years ago
Nope, don't think you're weird at all. Especially if you worked with the woman I did who applied her entire face on her 15 mile commute including that little lash curler dealie. I asked her several times why she just didn't get up 20 minutes earlier.
Jessikah 19 years ago
When I was in high school, I had a teacher (with a PhD.. but NO common sense) that would commute about an hour to work. She would prop a book up on the steering wheel and read while driving. If I remember correctly, she was the cause of a 3-car fender bender because she rear-ended a student's car (knocking it into the car infront of it) on the street that leads away from the school.

So, yes.. some people DO try to read while driving.
Vulash 19 years ago
I talk on mine while driving constantly. I don't drink and drive. I've never had an accident. Many girls apply makeup and other stupid shit like getting dressed while driving. Hell I guess maybe some guys do =x Reading while driving is ignorant - I thought about it once while bored, and realized it would be completely stupid. Ohio drivers can't drive.
Vulash 19 years ago
For the record - my opinion? Bad drivers cause wrecks. (occasionally unavoidable circumstances I realize). I'd take someone that pays attention on the phone over someone that is a complete idiot with no commen motherfucking sense about being a complete fucking goddamn moron on the road anyday. Unfortunately it's usually both ;(
Vebran 19 years ago
News Flash......This just in from all human history.....being distracted diverts your attention from your primary focus.

Honestly, everyone gets, or is, distracted while they drive. You'll look at another car, landmark, people, sing along with the radio/CD, drink your drink, eat your food, fiddle with the car controls, talk/yell at your kids/other person in the car, etc, etc, etc. I have to dare one person anywhere to say they aren't distracted at some point everytime they drive, no one is 100% focused on driving 100% of the time.



If you say that you do, I call thee a liar or you must only drive once a week at the most 3 miles.
Den 19 years ago
I'll be the first to admit I get distracted when I drive...but, normally it's only for a few seconds, here and there. I know for a fact when I talk on a cell phone I shut off almost everything else around me. Truthfully, I don't understand it, because I can talk to people in the car just fine, and still concentrate on the road...but not on a cell phone. And if I'm like that, there have to be other people out there like that too.
Vex 19 years ago
you're right veb :P i tend to be the person thats lagging at the 'go' sign cause i have an obsession with cleaning my nails when i cant do anything esel.
Vulash 19 years ago
You guys have go signs? How do those work exactly? :P
Vex 19 years ago
sign.. light... whatever :P
Vebran 19 years ago
Vex
and people think IM weird for not wanting to leave my house.


Vex
i tend to be the person thats lagging at the 'go' sign


You really need to get out more.:D
carpex 19 years ago
I was sending emails from my BlackBerry at 85mph omw home today.
Vex 19 years ago
Vebran
You really need to get out more.:D


I went out today, actually. I was really excited and I actually almost picked up the phone, then some dumb bitch almost ran over me while i saw her trying to DIAL on her phone, so i sat mine back down.
Lillaanya 19 years ago
A friend of mine recently lost her teenage son in a car accident. Most likely cause was his cell phone. They spoke to him just before and he said he was about 15 mins from home, shortly after his girlfriend got a call from him on his phone that immediately hung up on her...he never made it home.

He was at the end of a 5 hour drive on the interstate, the driver of the car behind him said he suddenly swerved and crossed the median...unfortunately straight into the path of an oncoming semi, the car rolled 3 times and then caught fire, it took the fire department 20 minutes to put it out (it only took them about 10 mins to get there...he was nearly in town) It took the coroner 3 months to positively id the body he was so badly burnt.

I turn my phone off when I drive now.