PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Survey Indicates that Teens are Prone to Distracted Driving

This article will explain the results of a recent Consumer Reports poll regarding distracted driving and the Transportation Department's plan for further educating the public on the risks.

2011-07-03
July 03, 2011 (Press-News.org) Survey Indicates that Teens are Prone to Distracted Driving

Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood and Consumers Union President Jim Guest recently announced that they will be working together to aid communities in educating young people about the risks of distracted driving. LaHood and Guest were inspired in part by a recent Consumer Reports poll regarding young people's behaviors and attitudes towards using handheld devices while driving.

The Transportation Department estimates that in 2009 alone, nearly 5,500 Americans were killed and an additional 500,000 were injured in traffic accidents involving a distracted driver. These statistics make plain the need to address distracted driving practices among inexperienced and tech-savvy teen drivers in particular.

Despite this startling reality, the Consumer Reports survey results indicate that teenagers are doing little to reverse the distracted driving trend sweeping the nation. Surprisingly, 63 percent of respondents under the age of 30 admitted to driving while using a cell phone and 30 percent admitted to having sent text messages while driving. In comparison, 41 percent of older adults admitted to having used a cell phone and only 9percent to having sent a text while driving.

Only 36 percent of respondents under the age of 30 reported being very concerned about the issue of distracted driving and 30 percent felt it was very dangerous to use a cell phone while driving. Overall, 58 percent of respondents had witnessed a dangerous situation involving a distracted driver within the past month. Of those respondents who reported that they had recently reduced their distracted driving behaviors, 66 percent said they did so after reading or hearing about the risks.

"Distracted driving has become a deadly epidemic on America's roads, and teens are especially vulnerable," Secretary LaHood recently insisted. "...We're pleased to be working with Consumer Reports to raise awareness and help communities fight this problem."

The Transportation Department and Consumer Reports are educating communities initially through a free guide: "Distracted Driving Shatters Lives." The guide aims to help parents and teachers communicate with teens about the dangers of distracted driving practices. The guide, which is available on the agency's website, may not solve the scourge of distracted driving plaguing the nation's roads, but it is a positive step in the right direction.

Article provided by McKernan Law Firm
Visit us at www.mckernanlawfirm.com


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Preparing a Prenuptial Agreement: a Prudent Decision for Engaged Couples

2011-07-03
Preparing a Prenuptial Agreement: a Prudent Decision for Engaged Couples The private lives of celebrities have always been the spectacle of the general public. Recently, many of the country's rich and famous engaged couples have entered into prenuptial agreements, which are legal documents that can define how the couple will handle their finances during the marriage and protect individual property rights in the case of divorce. One famous prenuptial agreement is that of Katie Holmes and Tom Cruise. Their agreement awards Katie $3 million per year of marriage until the ...

Pigeons never forget a face

Pigeons never forget a face
2011-07-03
New research has shown that feral, untrained pigeons can recognise individual people and are not fooled by a change of clothes. Researchers, who will be presenting their work at the Society for Experimental Biology Annual Conference in Glasgow on Sunday the 3rd of July, have shown that urban pigeons that have never been caught or handled can recognise individuals, probably by using facial characteristics. Although pigeons have shown remarkable feats of perception when given training in the lab this is the first research showing similar abilities in untrained feral ...

Mesothelioma: Exposure and Risks

2011-07-03
Mesothelioma: Exposure and Risks Scientific and industrial innovations have led to many modern conveniences. However, they have also led to many of the challenges facing medicine today. Consider mesothelioma -- cancer of the mesothelium. In the United States, about 2,000 new cases of this rare cancer are diagnosed, and another 2,500 people die from the disease each year. While mesothelioma might have many causes, the most common is asbestos exposure. Mesothelioma is a condition in which the cells within the linings of organs mutate and multiply out of control. Malignant ...

Keeping Your Kids Safe Around the Pool This Summer

2011-07-03
Keeping Your Kids Safe Around the Pool This Summer Now that summer is in full swing, pool safety is in the news again, and for good reason. Tragically, hundreds of children drown each year in pools and spas around the country, and thousands more have near-misses. The Consumer Products Safety Commission (CPSC) has determined that drowning is in fact the number one cause of death for children ages one-to-five in the United States. Most people don't know that children can drown in as little as two inches of water, and that most pool-related drowning deaths occur when ...

Frog feet could solve a sticky problem

Frog feet could solve a sticky problem
2011-07-03
Tree frogs have specially adapted self-cleaning feet which could have practical applications for the medical industry. "Tree frog feet may provide a design for self-cleaning sticky surfaces, which could be useful for a wide range of products especially in contaminating environments - medical bandages, tyre performance, and even long lasting adhesives," says researcher, Niall Crawford at the University of Glasgow who will be presenting this work at the Society for Experimental Biology Annual Conference in Glasgow on 3rd of July, 2011. Tree frogs have sticky pads on ...

Workers' Compensation Disability Benefits and Your Heirs in Maryland

2011-07-03
Workers' Compensation Disability Benefits and Your Heirs in Maryland The purpose of workers' compensation is different from a lawsuit. The Maryland Workers' Compensation Act, unlike tort law, is not designed to make an injured worker whole, but rather to provide financial support following an injury. Workers' Compensation functions more like an insurance policy, making payments to the injured employee, and in some cases, to his or her dependents after his or her death. If you have been awarded a disability benefit and die before all of it has been paid, section ...

Climate change threatens endangered freshwater turtle

Climate change threatens endangered freshwater turtle
2011-07-03
The Mary river turtle (Elusor macrurus), which is restricted to only one river system in Australia, will suffer from multiple problems if temperatures predicted under climate change are reached, researchers from the University of Queensland have shown. The scientists, who are presenting their work at the Society for Experimental Biology Annual conference in Glasgow on 3rd July 2011, incubated turtle eggs at 26, 29 and 32⁰C. Young turtles which developed under the highest temperature showed reduced swimming ability and a preference for shallower waters. This combination ...

How Workers' Compensation and Other Benefits Can Affect SSDI Benefits

2011-07-03
How Workers' Compensation and Other Benefits Can Affect SSDI Benefits If you receive Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) benefits, there are limits on how much total compensation you can collect if you also are eligible for additional public disability or workers' compensation benefits. If your benefits exceed an amount set by the Social Security Administration (SSA), the SSA may reduce the amount of SSDI benefits you receive to offset the other public disability or workers' compensation benefits you receive. Public Benefits That May Reduce Your SSDI Benefits Workers' ...

Zinc and the zebrafish

2011-07-03
Scientists from Queen Mary, University of London have discovered a new way of detecting zinc in zebra fish, that could pave the way for furthering our understanding of diseases like type 2 diabetes, prostate cancer and Alzheimer's. The results will be announced today (3 July) at the Sixth International Symposium on Macrocyclic and Supramolecular Chemistry, in Brighton. Zinc is found throughout the body and involved in many metabolic pathways that affect the function of the immune system and brain, reproduction, and sexual development. Zinc is also increasingly recognised ...

Proposed Changes to New Jersey Hit-and-Run Laws

2011-07-03
Proposed Changes to New Jersey Hit-and-Run Laws At about 12:30 pm on December 15, 2010, Millville, New Jersey, police officers investigated a report of a body on the side of Silver Run Road. When they arrived, they found 36-year-old Edward Morrison unresponsive on the roadside. Medical personnel transported Morrison to a hospital, where doctors pronounced Morrison dead about an hour later. Police offered a $1,500 reward for information about what happened to Morrison and they received a tip the next day that a local man's 2000 Hyundai Elentra appeared to have been ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Bluey’s dad offered professorial chair in archaeology at Griffith University

Beyond small data limitations: Transfer learning-enabled framework for predicting mechanical properties of aluminum matrix composites

Unveiling non-thermal catalytic origin of direct current-promoted catalysis for energy-efficient transformation of greenhouse gases to valuable chemicals

Chronic breathlessness emerging as a hidden strain on hospitals

Paleontologists find first fossil bee nests made inside fossil bones

These fossils were the perfect home for ancient baby bees

Not everyone reads the room the same. A new study examines why.

New research identifies linked energy, immune and vascular changes in ME/CFS

Concurrent frailty + depression likely boost dementia risk in older people

Living in substandard housing linked to kids’ missed schooling and poor grades

Little awareness of medical + psychological complexities of steroid cream withdrawal

Eight in 10 trusts caring for emergency department patients in corridors, finds BMJ investigation

NASA’s Webb telescope finds bizarre atmosphere on a lemon-shaped exoplanet

The gut bacteria that put the brakes on weight gain in mice

Exploring how patients feel about AI transcription

Category ‘6’ tropical cyclone hot spots are growing

Video: Drivers struggle to multitask when using dashboard touch screens, study finds

SLU research shows surge in alcohol-related liver disease driving ‘deaths of despair’

Rising heat reshapes how microbes break down microplastics, new review finds

Roots reveal a hidden carbon pathway in maize plants

Membrane magic: FAMU-FSU researchers repurpose fuel cells membranes for new applications

UN Member States pledge to increase access to diagnosis and inhaled medicines for the 480 million people living with COPD

Combination therapy shows potential to treat pediatric brain cancer ATRT

Study links seabird nesting to shark turf wars in Hawai‘i

Legal sports betting linked to sharp increases in violent crime, study finds

Breakthrough AI from NYUAD speeds up discovery of life-supporting microbes

New Eva Mayr-Stihl Foundation funding initiative boosts research at University of Freiburg on adaptation of forests to global change

The perfect plastic? Plant-based, fully saltwater degradable, zero microplastics

Bias in data may be blocking AI’s potential to combat antibiotic resistance

Article-level metrics would provide more recognition to most researchers than journal-level metrics

[Press-News.org] Survey Indicates that Teens are Prone to Distracted Driving
This article will explain the results of a recent Consumer Reports poll regarding distracted driving and the Transportation Department's plan for further educating the public on the risks.