Despite the recent drop in the number of injured pedestrians, total injuries
related to walking while using a GT-I9300
cell phone have more than doubled over the past decade.Jack Nasar,
co-author of the study and professor of city and regional planning at The Ohio
State University, said that if this trend continues he wouldn't be surprised if
the number of pedestrian deaths related to cell phone use doubles again by
2015.
He added that "the role of cell phones in distracted driving
injuries and deaths gets a lot of attention and rightly so, but we need to also
consider the danger cell phone use poses to pedestrians."According to the
results of the study people between the ages of 16 to 25 were at the most risk
of being injured because of cell phone use.
The researchers analyzed
injury reports of more than 100 hospitals collected by the National Electronic
Injury Surveillance System - a database maintained by the U.S. Consumer Products
Safety Commission (CPSC). From 2004 to 2010 the investigators identified the
number of pedestrian injuries which were associated with cell phone use.
The researchers came across several cases of accidents while people were
walking and talking on their mobile phones. One case involved a teenage boy
walking straight off a bridge into a ditch while talking on a cell phone, and
another man was hit by car while walking across the road and chatting on his
phone.
In 2004, around 559 pedestrians were admitted to hospital
following an injury related to cell phone use, the following year there were
only 256 cases. However, the number of pedestrians treated in emergency rooms
while using their cell phone has risen every year since 2005.The authors say
that the number of cell phone-related injuries could actually be a lot
higher.12ffglGRD
They believe that a better way of calculating the real
extent of pedestrian injuries related to cell phone use could come from
comparing distracted walking to distracted driving - which has been studied very
well. A study published in the American Journal of Public Health revealed that
texting and cell phone use have led to a significant rise in fatalities due to
distracted driving, rising from 4,572 fatalities in 2005 to 5,870 in
2008.
Another study, which appeared in the journal Applied Cognitive
Psychology showed that people have greater difficultly maintaining a fixed
speed, or keeping their car safe in a single lane when using their cell
phone.The researchers compared CPSC estimates for injuries among drivers who
were distracted by GT-I9500
cell phones with more accurate data gathered from emergency rooms.
The analysis revealed that the number of actual crash-related injuries
in emergency rooms related to cell phone use is grossly underestimated by the
CPSC. In fact, Nasar said that the real number of injuries is more than 1,300
times higher than what the CPSC estimated.
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