The founder of a driving school recently described the many risks associated with putting a teenager behind the wheel. An article recently published by CNN details the many recent wrecks involving teens, one that left someone with a plastic eye, metal rods for legs, and a nose reconstruction surgery. The many injuries and deaths involving teen drivers continue to rise, and those numbers drastically increased concerning distractions. The driver in the incident described by CNN can now walk, but his family said that many parents of teen drivers do not have the same luck. Three collisions within three days resulted in the deaths of 15 teens. His parents said he didn’t want any other parents to experience the grief of knowing their child was seriously injured or died due to sending a text message.
For ages 15-20, car wrecks are top cause of fatalities, according to the National Center for Health Statistics. Traffic fatality rates are dropping over the past decades, but these rates are still high. Every time a teen driver gets behind the wheel of a car, they are a significant risk to themselves, passengers, and others on the roadway. In 2010, 2,700 were killed ages 16-19 due to crashes, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 282,000 required treatment for injuries sustained during an auto accident, and drivers aged 15-19 are three times more likely to get into a fatal collision compared to older drivers.
The driving school founder said those figures are shocking, and he hopes those numbers can help parents of teen drivers to realize the seriousness of the problem, and that teens need to know they are responsible for not only themselves, but everyone else on the road. Texting is very dangerous because drivers need to keep the ye on the road ahead of them and look for dangers including animals leaping into the road. Wrecks are more likely to happen within the first few months after a teen gets licensed, and over half of teen deaths happen due to weekend car wrecks.
There is new technology hoping to keep teens more sage, including a graduated licensing system. Parents can put tracking technology that records a teen driver’s habits, and teens can also install an app that helps track their braking and acceleration and offers feedback, according to news reports. Despite all these advances, he says that parents must work to enforce rules and keep their children safe.

