Drowsy Driving
"THE SILENT KILLER" - FACTS AND STATS
WASHINGTON, DC, November 20 – About one-half of
adult drivers – 51% or about 100 million people –
say they have driven a vehicle while feeling drowsy
in the past year, and almost two in 10, (17% or 32
million people), have actually fallen asleep at the
wheel, according to the
National Sleep Foundation's
(NSF) 2002 Sleep in America poll. One percent –
approximately two million drivers – admit they have
had an accident because they dozed off or were too
tired to drive.
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
conservatively estimates that 100,000
police-reported crashes are the direct result of
driver fatigue each year. This results in an
estimated 1,550 deaths, 71,000 injuries, and $12.5
billion in monetary losses. These figures may be the
tip of the iceberg, since currently it is difficult
to attribute crashes to sleepiness.
- There is no test to determine sleepiness as
there is for intoxication, i.e. a "Breathalyzer".
- State reporting practices are inconsistent.
There is little or no police training in identifying
drowsiness as a crash factor. Six states, (Alabama,
Missouri, Arkansas, Delaware, Massachusetts, and
Wisconsin) still do not have a code for sleepiness
on their crash report forms.
- Self-reporting is unreliable.
- Drowsiness/fatigue may play a role in crashes
attributed to other causes such as alcohol. About
one million such crashes annually are thought to be
produced by driver inattention/lapses.
According to data from Australia, England, Finland,
and other European nations, all of whom have more
consistent crash reporting procedures than the U.S.,
drowsy driving represents 10 to 30 percent of all
crashes.
Who is at risk?
- Sleep related crashes are most common in
young people, especially men, adults with
children and shift workers. According to the
NSF's 2002 poll:
- Adults between 18-29 are much more likely to
drive while drowsy compared to other age groups
(71% vs. 30-64, 52% vs. 65+, 19%).
- Men are more likely than women to drive
while drowsy (56% vs. 45%) and are almost twice
as likely as women to fall asleep while driving
(22% vs. 12%).
- Adults with children in the household are
more likely to drive drowsy than those without
children (59% vs. 45%).
- Shift workers are more likely than those who
work a regular daytime schedule to drive to or
from work drowsy at least a few days a month
(36% vs. 25%).
- Sleep deprivation increases the risk of a
sleep-related crash; the less people sleep, the
greater the risk.
- According to a study by the
AAA Foundation
for Traffic Safety, people who sleep six to
seven hours a night are twice as likely to be
involved in such a crash as those sleeping 8
hours or more, while people sleeping less than 5
hours increased their risk four to five times.
- A study by researchers in Australia showed
that being awake for 18 hours produced an
impairment equal to a blood alcohol
concentration (BAC) of .05, and .10 after 24
hours; .08 is considered legally drunk.
- Other research indicates commercial drivers
and people with undiagnosed sleep disorders such
as sleep apnea and acute insomnia are also at
greater risk for fall asleep crashes.
Nearly three-quarters of adults in America
(71%)
drive a car to and from work, and many are drowsy
drivers, according to
NSF's 2001 Sleep in America
poll. More than one-fourth of these respondents (27%) said they have driven drowsy to or from work
at least a few days a month, 12 percent drove drowsy
a few days a week, and four percent said they drove
drowsy every day or almost every day.
Sleep deprivation and fatigue make lapses of
attention more likely to occur, and may play a role
in behavior that can lead to crashes attributed to
other causes.
- According to
NSF's 2000 Sleep in America
poll, when they are driving drowsy, 42 percent
of those polled said they become stressed, 32
percent get impatient and 12 percent tend to
drive faster.
- In the same poll, about one in five drivers
(22%) said they pull over to nap when driving
drowsy. Older adults are more likely to pull
over and nap than younger drivers, who are most
likely to drive when drowsy and least likely to
pull over and nap.
People tend to fall asleep more on high-speed,
long, boring, rural highways. However, those who
live in urban areas are more likely to doze off
while driving compared to people in rural or
suburban areas (24% vs. 17%).
Most crashes or near misses occur between 4:00 -
6:00 a.m.; midnight - 2:00 a.m. and 2:00 - 4:00 p.m.
are also peak times for crashes to occur. Nearly
one-quarter of adults (23%) say they know someone
personally who has crashed due to falling asleep at
the wheel.
In
NSF's 1999 Sleep in America poll, 60 percent
of parents with children who drive living in the
household said they have not discussed the dangers
of falling asleep at the wheel. In the 2002 poll,
nearly all respondents (96%) agreed that information
about driving while drowsy should be included in
tests for a driver's license.
Drowsy driving crashes can result in high personal and economic costs.
- Several drowsy driving incidents have
resulted in jail sentences for the driver.
- Multi-million dollar settlements have been
awarded to families of crash victims as a result
of lawsuits filed against individuals as well as
businesses whose employees were involved in
drowsy driving crashes.
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