Eye to Eye with Your Mechanic by Marvin Ray - HTML preview

PLEASE NOTE: This is an HTML preview only and some elements such as links or page numbers may be incorrect.
Download the book in PDF, ePub, Kindle for a complete version.

Chapter Fourteen

Lost in thought?

Lost  in thought while driving can change the  rest of your life.  Check  out  the  Top  10  List  Of  The  Most  Deadliest Driving Distractions More  than 65,000  people  have  been killed  in  car crashes over the past two  years, one  in 10 were in crashes where  at  least  one  of  the  drivers  was  distracted.  That’s according to police report data analyzed by Erie Insurance in   the   Fatality   Analysis   Reporting  System  (FARS),   a nationwide  census  of  fatal  motor  vehicle  traffic  crashes maintained   by   the   National   Highway   Traffic   Safety Administration.

"Lost   in   thought  or   as   some   call   is  distracted driving, as is any activity that takes your eyes off the road, your  hands off  the  wheel,  or  your  mind off  your  primary task   of  driving  safely,"  says   Doug  Smith,   senior   vice president of personal lines at Erie Insurance. "We looked at what  law enforcement officers  across the country reported when they filled out reports on fatal crashes and the results were disturbing. We hope the data will encourage people to avoid  these  high"risk  behaviors  that  needlessly  increase their risk of being involved in a fatal crash."

The analysis, which looked  at data  from 2010 and 2011,  showed  police  listed  the  majority  of  drivers  who were   distracted   as   "generally   distracted"   or   "lost   in thought." Police also  listed several more specific types of distractions.

Below  are  the  top  10  distractions  involved   in  fatal  car crashes:

Distracted Drivers

1          Generally     distracted     or     "lost     in     thought"

(daydreaming) 62%

2          Cell phone  use (talking,  listening,  dialing,  texting) 12%

3          Outside    person,     object    or    event,     such    as rubbernecking 7%

4          Other  occupants  (talking  with  or  looking  at  other people in car) 5%

5          Using or  reaching  for  device  brought  into  vehicle, such as navigational device, headphones 2%

6          Eating or drinking 2%

7          Adjusting audio or climate controls 2%

8          Using other device/controls integral to vehicle, such as   adjusting   rear   view   mirrors,   seats,   or   using   OEM navigation system 1%

9          Moving  object  in  vehicle,  such  as  pet  or  insect 1%

10        Smoking  related   (includes  smoking,   lighting  up, putting ashes in ashtray) 1%

I didn't see any mention of the woman or guy (both on separate occasions) that I saw eating a bowl of cereal on the way to work. Really? There are a lot of things I do, that I should not when driving, but eating a bowl of cereal?

Smith added that because FARS data on distraction is based largely on police officers’ judgment at the time of the  crash,  and  because  some  people  may be  reluctant  to admit  they  were  distracted   when  being  interviewed  by police  after a  fatal car  crash,  the  numbers  are  difficult  to verify and may, in fact, under" represent the seriousness and prevalence of driving distractions.

The  data  is  meaningful,  however,  because  unlike surveys   in   which   consumers   self"report   the   types   of distracted behaviors they engage in, the FARS data is based on actual police reports on fatal crashes.

If you "feel" the need to eat cereal or do your hair, makeup, eyeliner on the way to work, do us all a favor; get up earlier and do it before you leave the house, because you are endangering not only yourself, but everyone else on the road. We  have enough things out there that take our eyes off the road we don’t need any extras.

My computer once beat me at chess, but it was no match for me at kick boxing.”