Calgary Herald

Teen drivers distracted in 58% of collisions

New study shows problem greater than estimated

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Distractio­ns — especially talking with passengers and using cellphones — play a far greater role in car crashes involving teen drivers than has been previously understood, according to compelling new evidence cited by safety researcher­s.

The AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety analyzed nearly 1,700 videos that capture the actions of teen drivers in the moments before a crash. It found that distractio­ns were a factor in nearly six of 10 moderate to severe crashes. That’s four times the rate in many previous official estimates that were based on police reports.

The study is unusual because researcher­s rarely have access to crash videos that clearly show what drivers were doing in the seconds before impact as well as what was happening on the road. AAA was able to examine more than 6,842 videos from cameras mounted in vehicles, showing the driver and the simultaneo­us view out the windshield.

The foundation got the videos from Lytx Inc., which offers programs that use video to coach drivers in improving their behaviour and reducing collisions. Crashes or hard- braking events were captured in 1,691 of the videos.

They show driver distractio­n was a factor in 58 per cent of crashes, especially accidents in which vehicles ran off the road or had rearend collisions. The most common forms of distractio­n were talking or otherwise engaging with passengers and using a cellphone, including talking and texting.

Other forms of distractio­n observed in the videos included drivers looking away from the road at something inside the vehicle, 10 per cent; looking at something outside the vehicle other than the road ahead, nine per cent; singing or moving to music, eight per cent; grooming, six per cent; and reaching for an object, six per cent.

In one video released by AAA, a teenage boy is seen trying to navigate a turn on a rain- slicked road with one hand on the wheel and a cellphone held to his ear in the other hand. The car crosses a lane of traffic and runs off the road, stopping just short of railroad tracks that run parallel to the road.

One teen driver is captured braking hard at the last moment to avoid slamming into the back of an SUV stopped or slowed in traffic ahead. Just a moment before, the girl had turned her attention to another girl in the front passenger seat in an animated conversati­on. The camera shows the shock on the girls’ faces as they suddenly realize a crash is imminent.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion has previously estimated that distractio­n of all kinds is a factor in only 14 per cent of all teen driver crashes.

The videos provide “indisputab­le evidence that teen drivers are distracted in a much greater percentage of crashes than we previously realized,” said Peter Kissinger, the foundation’s president and CEO.

Teen drivers using cellphones had their eyes off the road for an average of 4.1 seconds out of the final six seconds leading up to a crash, the AAA study found. Researcher­s also measured reaction times in rear- end crashes and found that teen drivers using cellphones failed to react more than half of the time before the impact, meaning they crashed without braking or steering away.

“The findings of the AAA Report confirm what safety groups have suspected for a long time — distractio­n is more severe and more common in teen driver crashes than previously found in government data,” said Jackie Gillan, president of Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety.

Teen drivers have the highest crash rate of any age group. About 963,000 drivers age 16 to 19 were involved in police- reported crashes in the U. S. in 2013, resulting in 383,000 injuries and 2,865 deaths.

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