More risk for truckers at 11th hour: Study
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — The crash risk for truck drivers in the last hour of the now legal 11-hour day behind the wheel in the U.S. is more than three times higher than during the first hour, according to a new Penn State research team.
For 60 years, federal rules limited truckers to driving 10 consecutive hours. However, in January 2004, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration raised the limit to 11 hours and reaffirmed the change in October this year.
The FMCSA did amend the rule this past fall to require eight consecutive hours off in the sleeper rather than the previous 2004 rule which allowed drivers to split their sleeper berth time in two periods of their choosing as long as one was at least two hours long.
more than 3 times the first hour: Penn State
Dr. Paul Jovanis, professor of civil engineering who led the Penn State study, says, “Our analysis of data from three national trucking companies during normal operations in 2004 shows that the crash risk is statistically similar for the first six hours of driving and then increases in significant steps thereafter. The 11th hour has a crash risk more than three times the first hour.”
Jovanis described the findings in a paper titled “On the Relationship of Crash Risk and Driver Hours of Service,” presented at the 2005 International Truck & Bus Safety Security Symposium in Alexandria, Va.
The pattern of increased crash risk associated with the number of hours driven that the Penn State team observed is contrary to the results of field studies conducted by others in the 1990s. However, the pattern is consistent with more recent Penn State observational studies. For example, using data on an estimated 16 million vehicle miles of actual long haul truck travel by professional drivers collected during 1984 and 1985, the Penn State researchers found recently that the 10th hour of driving had a crash risk 2.1 times the first hour of driving. Those results were reported at the Transportation Research Board annual meeting in Washington, D.C., last year and are scheduled to be published in a forthcoming issue of the Journal of the Transportation Research Board.
In their most recent study, the researchers also found that multi-day driving schedules, over 7 days, were associated with significant crash risk increases similar in magnitude to extended driving time.
In addition, separate analyses of the records of drivers who operate trucks that have sleepers with those that don’t show that there is a strong association of crash risk and driving time for sleeper operations, especially in the 8th, 10th and 11th hours. Non-sleeper operations associate crash risk with multi-day driving somewhat more strongly than with driving time.
“Considered as a whole, these results reveal important differences in crash risk associated with the two different types of trucking operations. One tentative conclusion is that the rigors of sleeper operations appear to result in a greater decline in performance at extended driving hours than for comparable non-sleeper operations,” Jovanis says.
The study was supported by the FMCSA but represents only the views of the authors.
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