(Press-News.org) A new study offers a stark reminder of how pervasive cell phone use while driving is for young people, as findings demonstrate teen drivers spend an average of 21.1% of each trip viewing their mobile behind the wheel.
In a questionnaire completed by more than 1,100 teen drivers across the US, the young motorists estimated that 26.5% of these glances were for two seconds or longer, a duration which dramatically increases their risk for a crash.
Results, published in the peer-reviewed journal Traffic Injury Prevention, show the most common reason for the distraction was entertainment (65%), followed by texting (40%) and navigation (30%).
“Distracted driving is a serious public health threat and particularly concerning among young drivers. Driving distracted doesn’t just put the driver at risk of injury or death, it puts everyone else on the road in danger of an accident,” says lead author Rebecca Robbins, PhD, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, a founding member of the Mass General Brigham healthcare system.
Distracted driving significantly increases the risk of crashes.
Across the US, 35 states have banned all types of phone usage for young drivers. However, in a previous national study, 91.8% of adolescents still report “regularly engaging” in at least one distracted driving behavior per trip – such as texting, talking on the phone, or using it for music.
In this new paper, a team of researchers from Mass General Brigham; Harvard University; the Center For Vehicle, Driver, and Safety Systems at Virginia Tech Transportation Institute; the University of Massachusetts; and the Technical University of Munich, wanted to identify the factors influencing teens in engaging in distracted driving.
In order to further explore attitudes, social norms, and perceived behavioral control, the authors conducted 20 interviews with high school students. The beliefs identified were incorporated into a 38-item questionnaire, which was put to a US geographic sample of 1,126 participants across the Northeast, Midwest, West, and South.
Responses indicate that many young drivers believe and understand that distraction at the wheel was associated with negative outcomes, and that their important social referents (like their parents and friends) think they should not drive distracted.
However, they believe their peers also drive distracted, highlighting the perceived social norm of the behavior.
Another finding from the survey suggests, however, that most teen drivers have a “strong belief” in their ability to withstand the pressure to drive distracted.
“We found that while young drivers recognize the advantages of using smartphone features like GPS, they also understand the heightened risk of accidents associated with distracted driving,” said Dr. Robbins – who specializes in developing research that uses marketing and communication tools and technologies to design persuasive behavior change interventions to improve sleep and circadian health.
“Encouraging the use of ‘Do Not Disturb’ mode, keeping phones out of reach and ensuring teens get adequate sleep are effective strategies to mitigate this dangerous behavior.”
The paper aims to assist educators, parents, and local education leaders in creating message-based promotions.
One campaign, the experts suggest, could be aimed at debunking the belief that phone use at the wheel allows one to be productive while driving.
A limitation of the research is the small sample size used for the semi-structured interviews (n=20), “which may not accurately represent the broader high school-aged driving population,” state the authors.
“In addition,” the authors write, “we excluded schools in urban areas during the qualitative phase, given the lower prevalence of driver’s licenses in these regions. Thus, our results may need to be replicated among urban adolescent drivers to ensure broader applicability”.
However, the authors state that their questionnaire could be used again to interview more young drivers. Such future quantitative research deploying the survey, they write, “can first assess the presence and the strength of these beliefs, then investigate their relationship to behavioral intentions and actual behaviors”.
“This approach can help to illuminate the beliefs most strongly linked to behavioral intentions, guiding the development of targeted interventions,” they conclude.
END
Teens report spending 21% of each driving trip looking at their phone
Findings from the Mass General Brigham study reveal entertainment is the most common distraction behind the wheel
2025-07-03
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Study explores the ‘social norms’ of distracted driving among teens
2025-07-03
A new study from Mass General Brigham researchers offers a stark reminder of how pervasive cell phone use while driving is among young people. The study team developed and disseminated a questionnaire to over 1,100 participants and conducted 20 interviews for high school students to identify the factors influencing them to engage in distracted driving. They found an average of 21% of teen drivers drive distracted and share other insights behind the behavior. Their results are published in Traffic Injury Prevention. ...
Diver-operated microscope brings hidden coral biology into focus
2025-07-03
The intricate, hidden processes that sustain coral life are being revealed through a new microscope developed by scientists at UC San Diego’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography.
The diver-operated microscope — called the Benthic Underwater Microscope imaging PAM, or BUMP — incorporates pulse amplitude modulated (PAM) light techniques to offer an unprecedented look at coral photosynthesis on micro-scales.
In a new study, researchers describe how the BUMP imaging system makes it possible to study the health and physiology of coral reefs in their natural habitat, ...
Enhancing the “feel-good” factor of urban vegetation using AI and street view images
2025-07-03
Osaka, Japan – The benefits of urban green spaces in cities, in terms of ecological sustainability, climate modification, and human well-being, have been known for decades. More recently, additional economic and restorative payoffs from diverse and colorful plantings have been recognized. Now, a research team from Japan has developed a new method to identify vegetation color, structure, and seasonal changes in urban settings.
In a study published in Landscape Ecology, researchers at The University of Osaka reveal an innovative approach to capture seasonal changes in urban plant species. This method combines artificial intelligence ...
A single genetic mutation may have made humans more vulnerable to cancer than chimpanzees
2025-07-03
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — New research from UC Davis Comprehensive Cancer Center has uncovered an evolutionary change that may explain why certain immune cells in humans are less effective at fighting solid tumors compared to non-human primates. This insight could lead to more powerful cancer treatments.
The study was published in Nature Communications. It revealed a tiny genetic difference in an immune protein called Fas Ligand (FasL) between humans and non-human primates. This genetic mutation makes the FasL protein vulnerable to being disabled by plasmin, a tumor-associated ...
Innovative nanocomposite hydrogel shows promise for cartilage regeneration in osteoarthritis treatment
2025-07-03
A research team from Northwest University, China, has developed a breakthrough nano-composite hydrogel system to address the dual challenges of inflammation and cartilage damage in osteoarthritis (OA), a leading cause of joint disability worldwide. Published in Engineering, the study confirms that the dual-drug-loaded hydrogel promotes cartilage repair through synergistic immune regulation and chondrocyte differentiation, offering a novel therapeutic strategy for OA.
OA is characterized by persistent inflammation and impaired cartilage regeneration, with existing treatments failing ...
2025 Guangci Laboratory Medicine Innovation and Development Conference
2025-07-03
The 2025 Guangci Laboratory Medicine Innovation and Development Conference was successfully concluded at Shanghai Qingsongcheng Hotel during June 5-8, 2025!
With the theme of "Innovation, Guidance, and Development", this conference successfully brought together nearly 100 well-known experts and scholars at home and abroad, and carried out in-depth dialogues and collisions of ideas around the cutting-edge hotspots in the field of clinical and laboratory medicine. Through diversified academic exchanges, the conference has built a high-level technology sharing and achievement display platform for laboratory medicine ...
LabMed Discovery is included in the ICI World Journals database
2025-07-03
In May 2025, under the review of the Polish ICI World of Journals (Copernicus Index Database), LabMed Discovery magazine was officially included in the ICI World of Journals database. This marks an important step for LabMed Discovery on the international academic stage, and is also a high recognition of the journal's long-term efforts in improving academic quality and promoting academic exchanges.
ICI World of Journals is the world's third largest scientific journal database, which includes and evaluates 45,000 journals from more than 150 countries and regions. The database adopts strict review standards and conducts multi-dimensional ...
LabMed Discovery is included in the China Open Access Journal (COAJ) database
2025-07-03
After rigorous evaluation and review, LabMed Discovery was officially included in China Open Access Journal Database (COAJ) in May 2025. This progress marks that LabMed Discovery has been officially recognized in terms of academic quality, publishing standards and open access. It is also another achievement of LabMed Discovery following being selected into the ICI international database this month. This proves the improvement of LabMed Discovery's academic communication and influence, and is of great significance in furthering the speed, breadth and visibility of the journal's international dissemination. We ...
Vaccination support program reduces pneumonia-related mortality by 25 percent among the elderly
2025-07-03
A research team has evaluated the real-world impact of a community-based pneumococcal vaccination support program for older adults conducted in Sera Town, Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan.
Their work is published in the Journal of Epidemiology on May 5, 2025.
Pneumonia is one of the leading causes of death in Japan. Each year about 74,000 people die from pneumonia with 98 percent of these deaths occurring in people aged 65 and older. The bacteria Streptococcus pneumoniae is the primary cause of pneumonia.
In October 2014, Japan began a nationwide routine vaccination program for the elderly under ...
Over decades, a healthy lifestyle outperforms metformin in preventing onset of Type 2 diabetes
2025-07-02
In the early 2000s the U.S. Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP), a large randomized clinical trial, showed that intensive lifestyle modification was better than a medication called metformin at preventing at-risk patients from developing Type 2 diabetes.
In a newly completed follow-up study, a team of researchers including Vallabh “Raj” Shah, professor emeritus in The University of New Mexico Departments of Internal Medicine and Biochemistry & Molecular Biology at the School of Medicine, found that the health benefits from the lifestyle intervention persisted more than 20 years later.Molecular Biology at the School of Medicine
In a paper published in The ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Face‑/edge‑shared 3D perovskitoid single crystals with suppressed ion migration for stable X‑ray detector
Multiple solutions help fly embryos overcome the fundamental problem of ‘tissue tectonic collision’
GLP-1 weight-loss drugs pose hidden risks for young women
Strategies for enhancing energy‑level matching in perovskite solar cells: An energy flow perspective
3D‑printed boron‑nitrogen doped carbon electrodes for sustainable wastewater treatment via MPECVD
Screening anionic groups within zwitterionic additives for eliminating hydrogen evolution and dendrites in aqueous zinc ion batteries
New tectonic geodynamics textbook bridges scientific disciplines
Tiny and powerful – metamaterial lenses for your phones and drones
Study used AI models to improve prediction of chronic kidney disease progression to end stage renal disease
Peanut shell biochar composite shows promise for removing antibiotic-resistant bacteria from aquaculture wastewater
Compact genetic light switches transform disease control
Sunglasses for plants, and sustainable agriculture
Nearly half of those with diabetes unaware they have the disease
Emergency department visits by uninsured children in Texas soar 45% after COVID-era federal funding ends
Bright children from poorer backgrounds twice as likely to receive hospital mental health treatment than affluent high-achievers
‘Artificial cartilage’ could improve arthritis treatment
Breathing device could have profound impact on survival for people with sleep apnoea and type 2 diabetes
Artificial intelligence assessment indicates stress levels in farmed Amazonian fish
Keith Cole receives grant to conduct integrated research on mobility, cognition and aging
Internationally recognized malaria researcher Stefan Kappe, Ph.D., appointed new director of the UM School of Medicine's Center for Vaccine Development and Global Health
Lung cancer genetics study launches open-source data platform to research community
Pre-conception radiation exposure from CT scans increases risk for miscarriage and birth defects
Boston University appoints Kenneth Lutchen to top research job
For video-on-demand platforms, release strategy matters: streaming episodes gradually boosts consumers’ searches, subscription rates
Sleep strengthens muscle and bone by boosting growth hormone levels. Here's how
Only 1 in 7 online health images show proper technique to accurately measure blood pressure
Children receiving biofeedback speech therapy improved faster than with traditional methods
Scientists discover why the flu is more deadly for older people
The salmon superfood you’ve never heard of
How does chemotherapy disrupt circadian rhythms?
[Press-News.org] Teens report spending 21% of each driving trip looking at their phoneFindings from the Mass General Brigham study reveal entertainment is the most common distraction behind the wheel