Featured Guide
Featured Guide
Featured Guide
Featured Guide
Featured Guide
Featured Guide
Featured Guide
Have you ever driven home late at night, only to realize that you don’t actually recall the details of the drive? I have, and as a result vowed years ago to rearrange my travel schedule to avoid driving myself home from the airport in a late-night post-business-travel stupor. The National Healthy Sleep Awareness Projects calls drowsy driving a “pervasive threat to public health and transportation safety.”
Related: AAA: Open Your Eyes to the Dangers of Drowsy Driving
A study in the Accident Analysis and Prevention Journal showed that being awake for 21 hours can decrease the “ability to maintain speed and road position as serious as having a blood-alcohol concentration of 0.08 percent.” It’s no wonder that the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration reports more than 100,000 crashes every year are caused by drowsy drivers.
The Healthy Sleep Awareness Project has recently launched Awake at the Wheel, an initiative aimed at educating drivers on the dangers of driving drowsy. The experts behind the initiative go a few steps beyond simply preaching; here are some warning signs and tips to help you avoid driving drowsy:
Drowsy Driving Warning Signs
Drowsy Driving Prevention
“Rolling down the windows or turning up the volume on the radio will do little to increase your alertness while driving,” according to the National Healthy Sleep Project. Here are some more effective ways to avoid drowsy driving:
Join with us in vowing to never drive drowsy again — even if it means spending a little extra for a taxi, car service or a hotel for a night, or calling in a favor to a night-owl friend for a ride. Our lives are worth the extra effort.
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Former Senior Family Editor Kristin Varela blends work and family life by driving her three tween-teen girls every which way in test cars.