It was a beautiful sunny Sabbath afternoon as Pastor Smith returned home from worship services in his two-church district. Following the second service, the hospitality committee provided a special potluck luncheon, with the best pecan pie in the entire state! Then it was time for Pastor Smith to begin the two-hour drive back to his home and family. As the car traveled along the two-lane highway, the sun warmed the interior. Slowly it started–that drowsy feeling, the protracted yawning. It was time for Pastor Smith’s Sabbath afternoon nap, but there were still 80 miles to go before he would arrive at home. Pastor Smith turned up the volume on the CD. He hoped the voices of the King’s Heralds would help keep him awake. In the next mile, the tires were kicking up gravel on the right-hand shoulder of the road. What should he do? Surely heavenly angels would help keep him awake. After all Pastor Smith was returning from doing the Lord’s business. Or was he just one head nod away from becoming an accident statistic?
Situations like this occur all too often behind the wheel. The 2013 AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety study indicates 21 percent of all fatal automobile accidents involve a drowsy driver. This was an increase of four and a half percent over the previous study conducted in 2010. The AAA study indicates seven percent of all crashes involved drowsy drivers. In addition, 13% percent of the vehicles occupants suffered severe injuries that resulted in hospitalization. Most often these accidents involve single vehicles where the driver drifted off the highway.
Be alert and know the warning signs of drowsy driving:
- Trouble focusing and keeping your eyes open or your head up
- Yawning or rubbing your eyes repeatedly
- Daydreaming and wandering thoughts
- Drifting from your lane, tailgating and missing signs or exits
- Feeling restless, irritable, or aggressive
- Turning the volume up on the radio or rolling down the window
- Slower reaction time, poor judgment
There are three main types of distractions while driving:
- Visual: Taking your eyes off the road
- Manual: Taking your hands off the wheel
- Cognitive: Taking your mind off of driving
In 2011, the Center for Disease Control & Prevention did a comparative study of the distracted driving habits (talking on cellphones/texting-emails) of drivers in the United States and seven European countries. The findings indicated drivers in the United States were much more likely to talk on cellphones or read/send text and email messages while driving than European drivers. Sixty-nine percent of US drivers surveyed indicated talking on cellphones compared to 21 percent in the United Kingdom. Thirty-one percent of US drivers had read or sent text messages/emails compared to 15 percent of the drivers in Spain.
We need to understand the risks of distracted driving:
- Five percent of US drivers (660,000 vehicles) are using their hand-held cellphones at any given moment during the day.
- Taking one’s eyes off the road an average of five seconds, while driving at 55 mph, is equivalent to driving the length of a football field blindfolded
- Recent AAA studies indicate hands-free technologies like Bluetooth voice-to-text emails can be more dangerous while driving than hand-held phone conversations.
Lessons Learned
Drowsy and distracted driving are high-risk activities which can result in fatal vehicle accidents. Following five common sense rules of the road can reduce the risk to help prevent these accidents.- Drive only when well rested. Get a good night’s sleep before you drive.
- If you notice any signs of drowsiness or fatigue, safely get off the road and take a 15-20 minute nap to refresh yourself, or stop for the day if necessary.
- Establish a “No Cellphone or Texting While Driving” policy for your organization and distribute to all employees.
- Safely park off the road when setting GPS navigational units in the vehicle.
- Drive with a friend or have another passenger with you who can navigate, communicate with others, supervise passengers, and provide relief driving on long trips.
Defensive and safe driving is a serious responsibility. As the driver, you are responsible for the safety of yourself and others on the road at all times. So be alert, avoid texting while driving, and buckle up because no unsafe act is worth a life.