National Survey of Speeding, Unsafe, Distracted and Drowsy Driving 2002. Volume III: methods.

Author(s)
Royal, D.
Year
Abstract

This report represents the findings on distracted driving (including cell phone use) and drowsy driving. The data come from a pair of studies undertaken by National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) to better understand drivers’ behaviours and attitudes regarding speeding, unsafe driving, distracted and drowsy driving. This report, Volume III: Methods Report describes the methods used to conduct the interviews and analyse the data, and also contains the questionnaires. Volume I: Findings National Survey of Distracted and Drowsy Driving reports respondent’s behaviours and attitudes on various topics related to distracted and drowsy driving. Volume II: Findings Speeding and Unsafe Driving presents the data on those topics. The data will be used to help identify the extent to which potentially distracting behaviours are undertaken by drivers and to understand the characteristics of those engaging in these behaviours so that programs can be developed to reduce these behaviours where they have been shown to be dangerous. The data come from two surveys each conducted among nationally representative samples of drivers during the Spring of 2002. Interviews were conducted with a total of 4,010 drivers in the U.S. The survey findings show that most drivers at least occasionally engage in behaviours that draw some of their attention away from their driving task. The most common of these behaviours include general activities of talking with other passengers (81%), changing radio stations or CDs (66%), and eating or drinking while driving (49%). While it is estimated that more than a billion driving trips are made weekly by drivers engaging in each of these behaviours, fewer than one in four drivers perceive these particular activities as distracting or as making driving much more dangerous. About one in four drivers uses a cell phone while driving for either inbound (26%) or outbound calls (25%), while a similar proportion deals with children in a back seat (24%). It is estimated that almost 800 million one-way vehicle trips are made each week while drivers engage in each of these behaviours (nearly 20% of all driving trips). Close to one-half of drivers perceive these behaviours to make driving much more dangerous, although drivers who use cell phones are only half as less likely as non-users to feel cell phone use is dangerous (about four in ten users do as compared to about eight in ten non-cell phone users). About one quarter (26%) of drivers have been involved in a crash in the past five years. About 3.5% of drivers attribute a crash they’ve had in the past 5 years to their being distracted (including 0.8% looking for something outside of their vehicle and 0.7% dealing with children), seven-tenths of 1 percent (0.7%) attribute a crash they’ve had to drowsy driving, while one-tenth of 1 percent (0.1%) of drivers attribute a crash they’ve had to their cell phone use. Projected nationally, these figures amount to an estimated 7.17 million drivers involved in a crash they attribute to distracted driving, about 1.35 million drivers in a crash attributed to drowsy driving and about 292,000 drivers in a crash attributed to cell phone use over the past 5 years. (Author/publisher) http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/people/injury/drowsy_driving1/distracted03/Vol…

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Publication

Library number
C 34003 [electronic version only]
Source

Washington, D.C., U.S. Department of Transportation DOT, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration NHTSA, 2003, 85 p.; NHTSA Technical Report ; DOT HS 809 688

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