Commentary

Driven to distraction

Author and Disclosure Information

 

References

You say goodbye to your children as they prepare to go out for the evening:

“Don’t forget to smoke a couple of joints before driving in the snow tonight.”

“Grandma, Grandpa, it was great seeing you for the Holidays. To make sure you safely make it home, let’s share a few cocktails before you hit the road.”

“Hi, honey. I should be home in 15 minutes if this traffic doesn’t kill me.”

I suspect few of us would suggest our children or grandparents drive while impaired. But I bet a lot more you have had a cellular conversation while navigating the rush hour. And most of us take solace that our kids carry a cell phone in case of emergency.

But did you know that according to a recent study, “the impairments associated with using a cell phone while driving can be as profound as those associated with drinking and driving”?1

It’s time we recognize this important public health hazard. A recent review concluded that cellular phone users had a four-fold risk of a “property-damage-only crash,” and this risk was increased regardless of age, gender, or use of a hands-free phone.2 Moreover, while bans on cellphone use have an initial salutary effect, there is a rapid decline in compliance without regular enforcement and publicity.3

It’s certainly odd to see a well-groomed and seemingly sane businessman gesticulating wildly on a downtown street. It’s bad enough that you can’t even go into the airport restroom or a fine restaurant without the constant cacophony of cellular conversation. But amusement turns to horror as a car full of teens, radio blaring, weaves through traffic or a bleary-eyed commuter blithely converses while applying her makeup and juggling her latte.

While I don’t have the ultimate solution to cellular commotion, we should be counseling our patients about this public health hazard. Driven to distraction could mean a detour to death.

Recommended Reading

Gender Disparity In Management Of Lipids Persists
MDedge Family Medicine
Pioglitazone Stalled Thickening of The Carotid in Type 2 Patients
MDedge Family Medicine
Apnea Seen as an Independent Heart Risk Factor
MDedge Family Medicine
Stress and Anger Fuel Progression To Hypertension
MDedge Family Medicine
Biofeedback Lowers Blood Pressure in Type 2 Patients
MDedge Family Medicine
Web-Based Glucose Monitoring Shows Promise
MDedge Family Medicine
Graves' Warrants Lower-Dose Rx in Pregnancy
MDedge Family Medicine
Selenium Slows Down Autoimmune Thyroiditis
MDedge Family Medicine
Tools Predict Community Pneumonia's Course
MDedge Family Medicine
RSV Prophylaxis Boosts Protection of High Risk
MDedge Family Medicine