Skip to main content

Young distracted drivers causing crashes

The US-based AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety has carried out research revealing shocking figures on young driver distraction. According to video analysis, 58% of moderate-severe crashes involving teenaged drivers in the US include distraction as a causal factor. This figure is around four times than was previously thought based on police reports.
March 26, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
The US-based 4796 AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety has carried out research revealing shocking figures on young driver distraction. According to video analysis, 58% of moderate-severe crashes involving teenaged drivers in the US include distraction as a causal factor. This figure is around four times than was previously thought based on police reports.

The researchers investigated what happened during the six seconds prior to crashes. This study used video footage captured from in-vehicle recording equipment in close to 1,700 incidents involving teenaged drivers. The research revealed that driver distraction was a factor in 89% of incidents involving a vehicle leaving the road and 76% of those involving a rear-end crash. This is of note as previous data from the 2467 National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) has suggested distraction is a factor in just 14% of crashes involving teen drivers.

Interaction with passengers and cellphones were noted as particularly high risk factors by the research. The study showed that drivers using cellphones whether for texting, emailing, using the Internet or making phone calls, meant that drivers were not looking at the road for an average of 4.1 seconds of the six seconds immediately prior to a crash. Those teen drivers using a cellphone at the time of a crash failed to brake or steer out of danger in 50% of the crashes.

According to the AAA, graduated drivers licenses could help by restricting passengers and prohibiting cellphone use.

Analysis of crashes shows that teenaged drivers have the highest risk rate for any age group in the US. In 2013, police reports show that around 963,000 drivers aged 16-19 were involved in crashes. This is the most recent year with accurate data available. In the crashes, there were 383,000 injuries and 2,865 deaths.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Marginal US road safety improvement for 2018?
    July 19, 2018
    US roads have been slightly safer in 2018, according to new data from the National Safety Council (NSC). The research shows that motor-vehicle deaths have decreased in the first five months of 2018.There were 15,280 deaths in motor vehicle related incidents through January and May 2018. This represents a drop of 0.5% from the 15,330 deaths recorded through January and May 2017. However for the period through January and May 2016, the data shows that the rate of motor vehicle related deaths was 9% higher, h
  • Europe’s single vehicle crashes
    February 7, 2018
    A third of road deaths in the EU are caused by collisions that involve a single motorised vehicle where the driver, rider and/or passengers are killed but no other road users are involved. Nearly 7300 road users lost their lives in 2015 in SVCs in the EU. Around 94,800 people have died in such collisions in the last 10 years. Across the EU, the total number of people killed in SVCs was cut by 43% over the period 2005-2014. Deaths caused by collisions of this type have fallen a bit faster than road dea
  • UK crashes caused by driver error says IAM
    October 9, 2015
    According to the UK’s Institute of Advanced Motorists (IAM), the biggest cause of crashes on UK roads is driver error. Figures from the Department of Transport show that in 2014 driver/rider error or reaction were cited as contributory factors in 74% of accidents, involving more than 117,000 casualties. Some 20,830 of these were in London alone.
  • Concern at high US crashes
    September 30, 2020
    There is concern at the high US road crash rate.