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    Drivers still using mobiles at the wheel

Despite the threat of tougher penalties, some drivers are still willing to risk lives by using their mobiles while driving.

By Maggie Holland, 11 Dec 2009 at 13:06

Using mobile while at wheel

Shock tactic advertising campaigns showing using a phone while driving can be as bad as drink driving, and tougher penalties for offenders aren't working as the number of people using mobiles while at the wheel is increasing.

So claims new research from the Transport Research Laboratory (TRL), which shows that, despite the dangers and risks posed to the lives of drivers and others, the number of people using their mobiles while driving has doubled in the past two years.

Females under 30 (17-29) are the most likely offenders in their gender group, while for men, the worst culprits are those aged 30-59.

"Your reaction time is likely to be slower, you're more likely to drift across into the adjacent lanes and you're less aware of what's going on around you," TRL's Dr Nick Reed, said in an interview with the BBC.

He added: "You're less likely to check the mirrors and know there are vehicles there, so you're at a much greater risk of having an accident."

Charity Brake, which works to boost road safety and support those affected by road accidents, is calling on the government to introduce a blanket ban of mobile use in cars, adding that they provide too great a distraction to drivers.

“Using a hand held mobile phone, or talking on any kind of mobile phone hand held or hands free, is a major distraction and given all the publicity there has been about the dangers of mobile phones, and the tragedies caused by mobile phone users, there can’t be a driver out there who doesn’t know it," said Brake’s chief executive Mary Williams OBE, in a statement.

"Like drink or drug driving, there is absolutely no excuse for picking up a hand held phone and talking on it while driving. It not only demonstrates that you don’t care about road safety and the lives of others, and are prepared to put a call above safety, it also makes you look really stupid and selfish to other law-abiding drivers and to pedestrians and cyclists. The easiest way to improve your standing in your community is to hang up."

Williams continued: "Brake is calling on the government to ban all kinds of mobile phone use in vehicles as it is the distraction of the call, not the holding of the phone that causes the main danger.”

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1 comments

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Drive Safely

I feel it is better to concentrate on what I do rather than texting. Instead of being distracted I listen to incoming text messages and emails in my Android OS with I feel it is better to concentrate on what I do rather than texting. Instead of being distracted I listen to incoming text messages and emails in my Android OS with http://www.drivesafe.ly/ mobile application.

By JohnRob on Sunday Dec 13

1 people out of 1 found this comment useful.

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