Posted without comment.

George

http://www.straightdope.com/columns/060210.html

Is cell phone use in cars really dangerous?

10-Feb-2006

Dear Cecil:

Last year my town made it illegal to use a "hands-on" cell phone while 
driving--hands-free phones are still OK. Since laws here tend to get passed on 
the basis of what will look good in the newspapers, I'm
wondering: How dangerous is cell phone use in cars really? You see drivers all 
the time drinking coffee, putting on makeup, chatting with passengers, etc. As 
distractions go, the only obvious difference with cell phones is that they're 
relatively new and thus a target for legislative busybodies and the easily 
alarmed--there was all that noise a while back about cell phones causing brain 
cancer. What's the Straight Dope, Cecil? For that matter, what's up with cell 
phones and cancer?
--Fritz R., Chicago

Cecil replies:

Wish I could tell you it was all crap, compaƱero, but uh-uh.
Accumulating evidence suggests gabbing on the phone while driving is definitely 
dangerous, probably more so than other distractions. What's more, hands-free 
phones don't solve the problem. What gets you into trouble, it seems, isn't so 
much fumbling with the phone (though that doesn't help) as the apparent fact 
that driving and conducting a conversation at the same time consumes more 
mental processing power than most people can spare. A few data points:

     * Cell phones are involved in a lot of crashes. Best evidence:
investigations of actual incidents. One study of 456 accidents in Australia 
requiring a hospital visit (McEvoy et al, BMJ, 2005) found that in nine percent 
of cases (40 crashes) the driver had been talking on a cell phone during the 
ten minutes prior to the accident, based on phone records. The authors 
conclude, "A person using a mobile phone when driving is four times more likely 
to have a crash that will result in hospital attendance." A 1997 study of 699 
accidents in Toronto (Redelmeier and Tibshirani, New England Journal of 
Medicine) came to a comparable conclusion.

       In another study, researchers at the Virginia Tech Transportation 
Institute installed cameras, sensors, and data recording equipment in 100 cars, 
then watched what happened over the ensuing 12 to 13 months.
They recorded 69 crashes, 761 near crashes, and 8,295 lesser close calls. Of 
driver distractions that may have contributed to these incidents, use of cell 
phones was by far the most common, occurring in close to 700 cases. The distant 
runner-up was passenger-related activities, presumably including conversation, 
with fewer than 400 instances. Of the cell-phone-related distractions, 87 
involved dialing a handheld phone and 466 talking or listening.

     * Hands-free phones don't help much. Although laws restricting cell phone 
use in cars typically make an exception for the hands-free variety, numerous 
studies show such phones aren't markedly safer.
Dialing does make you take your eyes off the road, but as suggested above most 
cell-phone-related accidents seem to happen while the driver is merely 
conversing.

     * Drivers using cell phones have slower reaction times and miss important 
visual cues. Studies using driving simulators have found that drivers brake 
slower, fail to see pedestrians and traffic signals, and otherwise pay less 
attention to the road while on the phone. Some experts compare driving while 
phoning to driving while drunk, but a study by folks at the University of Utah 
(Strayer et al, 2004) suggests that in certain respects drunks actually do 
better behind the wheel than phone users--they seem to stay closer to the speed 
limit and brake faster in response to braking vehicles ahead. All in all, 
there's solid evidence that talking on the phone is among the more dangerous 
things you can do while driving.

Other cell phone risks quickly noted:

     * Do cell phones cause cancer? Most studies say no, but some holdouts 
still argue the point--and they're not all crackpots, either.
One difficulty: digital phones, the most popular type, have been in common use 
for less than ten years, too short a time for long-term health effects to show 
up.

     * Do cell phones cause other bad things? One never knows. A Hungarian 
study last fall was ominously entitled "Is There a Relationship Between Cell 
Phone Use and Semen Quality?" (Answer: maybe, and if so it ain't good.) I've 
also got a couple reports here of tendinitis and such due to excess sending of 
text messages.

On the bright side, cell phone interference with medical devices seems to have 
diminished, due in part to replacement of analog phones by digital ones. 
Finally, news of a cell-phone-abetted breakthrough in medical diagnosis: UK 
doctors report that a patient claimed to have "small bumps" in a delicate spot, 
but by the time he showed up at the clinic the bumps had subsided. 
"Fortunately, the patient had taken . . .
both a still and a video of his penis" using his cell phone. "The images were 
very clear and there was no doubt this man had had an outbreak of genital 
herpes." Ain't progress great?

--CECIL ADAMS 




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