
The following is excerpted from an online article posted by HealthDay.
About a fifth of the time, a teenage driver is looking at their smartphone rather than the road or their rearview, a new study says.
Teen drivers spend an average of 21% of each trip looking at their phone, according to results published today in the journal Traffic Injury Prevention.
Worse, these weren’t quick glances — nearly 27% of the time, the drivers focused on their phone for two seconds or longer, a duration that dramatically increases the risk of a crash, researchers said.
Teen drivers most commonly check out their phone for entertainment (65%) or texting (40%), with 30% using the phone’s GPS to help them navigate roads, results showed.
“Distracted driving is a serious public health threat and particularly concerning among young drivers,” lead researcher Rebecca Robbins, an assistant professor of medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, said in a news release.
“Driving distracted doesn’t just put the driver at risk of injury or death, it puts everyone else on the road in danger of an accident,” Robbins added.
Across the U.S., 35 states have banned all types of phone use for young drivers, researchers said in background notes.
But a previous national study found that nearly 92% of teens still regularly engage in texting, talking or dialing in tunes on their smartphone while behind the wheel, researchers said.
For the new study, researchers quizzed more than 1,100 teenagers about their behaviors and beliefs surrounding smartphone use while driving.
Results show that many young drivers understand bad things can happen when they’re distracted, and they’re aware that parents and friends wouldn’t like them to engage in distractions while operating a car.
Source: HealthDay
https://www.healthday.com/health-news/child-health/teen-drivers-spend-a-fifth-of-the-time-looking-at-their-smartphone-study-says