Driven to Distraction
Forget Gum. Walking and Using Phone Is Risky.

By MATT RICHTEL
The New York Times
January 17, 2010

SAN FRANCISCO - On the day of the collision last month, visibility 
was good. The sidewalk was not under repair. As she walked, Tiffany 
Briggs, 25, was talking to her grandmother on her cellphone, lost in 
conversation.

Very lost.

"I ran into a truck," Ms. Briggs said.

It was parked in a driveway.

Distracted driving has gained much attention lately because of the 
inflated crash risk posed by drivers using cellphones to talk and 
text.

But there is another growing problem caused by lower-stakes 
multitasking - distracted walking - which combines a pedestrian, an 
electronic device and an unseen crack in the sidewalk, the pole of a 
stop sign, a toy left on the living room floor or a parked (or 
sometimes moving) car.

The era of the mobile gadget is making mobility that much more 
perilous, particularly on crowded streets and in downtown areas where 
multiple multitaskers veer and swerve and walk to the beat of their 
own devices.

Most times, the mishaps for a distracted walker are minor, like the 
lightly dinged head and broken fingernail that Ms. Briggs suffered, a 
jammed digit or a sprained ankle, and, the befallen say, a nasty case 
of hurt pride. Of course, the injuries can sometimes be serious - and 
they are on the rise.

Slightly more than 1,000 pedestrians visited emergency rooms in 2008 
because they got distracted and tripped, fell or ran into something 
while using a cellphone to talk or text. That was twice the number 
from 2007, which had nearly doubled from 2006, according to a study 
conducted by Ohio State University, which says it is the first to 
estimate such accidents.

...

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/17/technology/17distracted.html

***********************************
* POST TO MEDIANEWS@ETSKYWARN.NET *
***********************************

Medianews mailing list
Medianews@etskywarn.net
http://lists.etskywarn.net/mailman/listinfo/medianews

Reply via email to