Sleep deprivation as bad for driving as booze

Published Dec 8, 2016

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Washington - Drivers who miss two or three hours of sleep in a day face the same risk of an accident as those who are legally drunk, according to an AAA study on the sometimes-deadly consequences of being drowsy behind the wheel.

On Tuesday the motoring and travel group announced that its study of 4571 US accidents showed that drivers who get less than the recommended seven hours of sleep a day are at a much higher risk of accidents. The study by the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety is the first to quantify the relationship between measures of sleep and the risk of getting into a crash, AAA said.

"You cannot miss sleep and still expect to be able to safely function behind the wheel," David Yang, executive director for the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety, said in a statement.

Drivers who go without two to three hours of sleep in a 24-hour period more than quadrupled their risk of a crash, compared with those getting seven hours.

That is the same crash risk that the US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has linked to driving over the legal limit for alcohol.

Drivers who are short of one to two hours of sleep nearly double their risk of having an accident, the AAA study showed.

The Centres for Disease Control and Prevention have said that 35 percent of US drivers sleep less than seven hours a day. A separate AAA study has found that about a fifth of fatal US traffic accidents involve a sleep-deprived driver.

Symptoms of drowsy driving can include having trouble keeping eyes open, drifting from lanes or not remembering the last few kilometres driven. But the AAA report said more than half of drivers involved in fatigue-related crashes experienced no symptoms.

The AAA recommended driving while normally awake and taking a break every two hours or every 160 km.

The report was based on figures from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration covering accidents between July 2005 and December 2007. 

Reuters

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