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A new study, many gains, many visits of the driving time in the United States, many visits with many confidence, many trusts have relied on the risk of crash. The investigation, which prevents traffic damage and broadcast in the magazine on Thursday, said that on average, 21.1% of adolescents visited their phones during 21.1%. More than a quarter of this distraction lasted for two seconds or longer, which is a while known as dangerously dangerous.
Teens reached for their telephones behind the wheel, 65% of respondents have reached their phones behind the wheel. Texting (40%) and navigation (30%) are also common. Researchers stressed that this distraction is usually emergency but ordinary or social.
The study includes survey answers between a group of 146-year-old drivers in all four regions of all four regions, along with a group of higher groups of high schools. Most participants were recognized that the driver was dangerous and believed that their parents and peers rejected the behavior.
However, many young people, as well as their friends, unplug the individual values and social norms, they assumed that they did it anyway.
Interestingly, the young people expressed their confidence in the ability to resist distraction. It offers confidence, researchers, future security campaigns may change the behavior if these relations specifically target.
The leading author of the study, Dr. Boston’s Brigham and Women’s Hospital. Rebecca Robbins stressing the social standards of interventions, emphasizing the “do not worry” regime and applicable practical steps, they have aimed to change social standards, he said.
“A serious society, which is a serious society, is interested in health, especially young drivers,” Robbins said. “The driver’s driver just puts the driver at risk of injury or death, and he sets everyone in danger of accident.”
Researchers say the findings can help in the management of the instructions and parents in more convincing messaging about the dangers of the distracted driver. One of the recommendations is that the use of adults when the phone uses is productive or harmless, the teenagers have beliefs.
Although the research quality component is limited to an example of small and non-urban samples, authors can be widely used to assess the effectiveness of beliefs, behaviors and future security efforts.