Drivers
Admit to Falling Asleep at the Wheel
Farmers Insurance Survey Reveals One in Ten
Has Snoozed While Driving; Twenty Percent Say They Have Nodded
Of
LOS ANGELES,
Jan. 28 /PRNewswire/ -- More than 10 percent of drivers admit to
having fallen asleep at the wheel, while more than 20 percent say
they have momentarily dozed while driving, according to a recent
Farmers Insurance survey of 1,024 drivers.
The U.S. National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) estimates that approximately
100,000 police-reported crashes annually involve drowsiness/fatigue
as a principal causal factor. Those crashes result in an estimated
1,500 fatalities and 71,000 injuries each year, and an annual monetary
loss of approximately $12.5 billion.
Referred to
as "the silent killer" because it is so often overlooked
as the cause of an accident, the full effect of drowsy driving is
not yet known because reporting is imprecise, police are not trained
to detect sleep-related crashes and there is no Breathalyzer-like
test to determine whether someone was driving while dangerously
drowsy.
"Driving
while drowsy or fatigued is something that most drivers have experienced
or will experience at some point," said Greg Ciezadlo, vice
president, Personal Lines, Auto Product Management for Farmers Insurance.
"We need to raise the awareness of this problem and educate
drivers on how to prevent it from happening."
According to
the Farmers survey, almost three times as many men (15.9 percent)
than women (5.8 percent) said they had fallen asleep while driving.
Those ages 55 to 64 had the highest percentage of any age group
surveyed (13.7 percent).
Nearly twice
as many (20.6 percent) of those surveyed said they had momentarily
dozed while driving, including 28.6 percent of the male respondents.
In addition, while 53.4 percent of all surveyed said they have felt
drowsy while driving, 41.2 percent claimed they kept driving.
The most popular
tactics those surveyed said they have used when they have become
sleepy while they were driving were:
1. Stop driving
or switch drivers (59.5 percent)
2. Open the
windows or turn on the air conditioning (59.0 percent)
3. Listen
to the radio or CDs (57.7 percent)
4. Stop to
eat or drink (46.3 percent)
5. Drink caffeine
(42.3 percent)
Other methods
the respondents claimed to have used to stay awake at the wheel
include talking or singing to themselves (31.7 percent), splashing
water in their faces (18.4 percent) and slapping, hitting or pinching
themselves (16.1 percent).
The American
Institute of Chartered Personal Casualty Underwriters (AICPCU) insists
"stay awake" behaviors such as exercising, turning on
the radio and opening the windows are misconceptions and have not
been proven to prevent sleep attacks.
Experts who
have looked at this say the only safe way to combat drowsy driving
is to take a 20-minute nap, then drive to the closest safe resting
spot -- such as a motel, friend's house or your home -- and sleep.
"With 'drowsy
driving' on the increase," Ciezadlo said, "it is increasingly
important drivers do all they can to prevent this problem, including
getting sufficient sleep and avoiding alcohol."
Farmers Insurance
Group of Companies® is the nation's third-largest Personal Lines
Property & Casualty insurance group. Headquartered in Los Angeles
and doing business in 41 states, the insurers comprising the Farmers
Insurance Group of Companies provide Homeowners, Auto, Business,
Life insurance and financial services to more than 10 million households
through 17,000 exclusive and independent agents and district managers.
For more information about Farmers, visit our Web site at www.farmers.com
Source:
Farmers Insurance Group
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