FACTS
- Fatigue decreases our ability to think clearly and remain attentive and vigilant. Drivers who are tired or fatigued are much more likely to make critical errors resulting in crashes.
- There is no test to determine sleepiness as there is for intoxication, i.e. a “Breathalyzer”.
- State reporting practices are inconsistent. There is little or no police training in identifying drowsiness as a crash factor. Every state currently addresses fatigue and/or sleepiness in some way in their crash report forms.
- Self-reporting is unreliable.
- Sleep related crashes are most common in young people, especially men, adults with children and shift workers.
- Sleep […]
This content is for Markel policy holders.
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