A Tennessee Automobile Accident Attorney Takes A Look at Distracted Driving
As a Tennessee automobile accident lawyer I am aware that these days, people are bombarded with devices that can help accomplish more in less time. With people spending an average of about one hour and 15 minutes in their vehicles every day, unfortunately, other activities, from talking to the kids to eating dinner, often take place behind the wheel.
Experts estimate that drivers are doing something potentially distracting more than 15 percent of the time their vehicles are in motion. So little time, so many multi-taskers. If you’re driving your vehicle, you are already multitasking. At a minimum you are: operating a piece of heavy machinery at high speed; navigating across changing terrain; calculating speeds and distances; and responding to all the other drivers and obstacles around you. Putting one more activity in the mix –even talking to your passengers or changing a radio station — can be enough to make you lose control of your vehicle or fail to respond in an emergency.
According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration driver inattention is the leading factor in most crashes. Nearly 80 percent of crashes and 65 percent of near-crashes involved some form of driver inattention within three seconds before the event. Primary causes of driver inattention are distracting activities, such as cell phone use, and drowsiness.
With those facts in mind I reference an article on the website of the Kingsport Times-News reporting on a fatal Tennessee automobile collision in which a van, owned and operated by a not-for-profit, crossed the center line and crashed head-on into another vehicle killing it’s driver.
As an experienced Tennessee automobile accident attorney I ask myself what causes a driver to be so distracted that he/she crosses the center-line and head-on’s another car? In the hundreds of cases that I have handled I have seen hundreds of distractions. Cell phones, texting, reaching for cigarettes, fooling with the radio, talking to passengers, thinking about things unrelated to driving, day-dreaming, and the list goes one. Fortunately for investigators the distracted driver here is alive to answer questions.
As an experienced Tennessee automobile accident lawyer I implore you to think about the distractions in your daily driving experience and try to avoid them. If you or a loved one is injured or killed in a Tennessee automobile accident caused by a distracted driver contact the experienced Nashville automobile accident attorney’s at Phillip Miller & Associates to learn about your rights and remedies.

Phillip Miller is a Tennessee Accident Attorney specializing in
Phillip has an AVVO rating of 10.0 (Superb), has been designated as a “Superlawyer”, and is the President Elect of the Tennessee Association for Justice.
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