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posted by martyb on Saturday July 23 2016, @10:02PM   Printer-friendly
from the 'hit-the-road'-but-don't-take-it-literally dept.

ScienceNews reports on a report from the CDC (informative graph):

U.S. drivers love to hit the road. The problem is doing so safely.

In 2013, 32,894 people in the United States died in motor vehicle crashes. Although down since 2000, the overall death rate - 10.3 per 100,000 people - tops 19 other high-income countries, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported July 8. Belgium is a distant second with 6.5 deaths per 100,000. Researchers reviewed World Health Organization and other data on vehicle crash deaths, seat belt use and alcohol-impaired driving in 2000 and 2013.

Canada had the highest percentage of fatal crashes caused by drunk drivers: 33.6 percent. New Zealand and the United States tied for second at 31 percent. But Canada and 16 other countries outperformed the United States on seat belt use - even though, in 2013, 87 percent of people in the United States reported wearing safety belts while riding in the front seat.

Spain saw the biggest drop - 75 percent - in its crash death rate. That country improved nearly all aspects of road safety, including decreasing alcohol-impaired driving and increasing seat belt use, the researchers say.


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  • (Score: 2) by mendax on Sunday July 24 2016, @12:41AM

    by mendax (2840) on Sunday July 24 2016, @12:41AM (#379240)

    Once you get away from California, Oregon, or Washington, there is no separate speed limit. It's 75 mph in Nevada, Arizona, Colorado, and New Mexico, and 80 mph on long stretches of interstate in Utah, Texas, and Wyoming. I-5 in the California central valley is straight as an arrow. Yes, trucks do have different handling characteristics (I have a CDL license I've just never used), and in some circumstances higher speed limits would be a problem, but not in the middle of nowhere. In anything, it would make the drive safer for everyone else by reducing the traffic congestion caused by slower trucks trying to pass even slower trucks.

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  • (Score: 2) by Pslytely Psycho on Sunday July 24 2016, @12:32PM

    by Pslytely Psycho (1218) on Sunday July 24 2016, @12:32PM (#379380)

    Yeah, the biggest problem with that is most major fleets speed limit their trucks to between 62 and 65 mph. So you end up with a 63 mph truck trying to pass a 62 mph truck in 70 mph traffic.

    And then they come to a hill......

    When I was a driver I tried to avoid the slow motion pass until the freeway was clear enough to pass with a minimum of inconvenience to other drivers. I also taught my students to do this. It's safer for me, it's safer for all. Unfortunately there are far too many drivers who pass irregardless of traffic. If you're an Owner Operator that has an unrestricted truck, it's not such a big deal. But where the difference in speed with corporate trucks may only be as little as a single mile per hour, and you don't give a fuck, well, it creates problems and safety hazards for all around you.

    A majority of commercial drivers drive well, with courtesy and respect. The assholes are who we are remembered by....

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