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Posted By Ken Urquhart
Keith.
This is an interesting topic and it has on several occassions previously been raised in this Forum. I have also previously contributed.
I apologise for this lengthy contribution in advance, but I believe the second part of your question raises the issues of what is not just a UK dilema but a world wide socio economic evolutionery and safety issue.
I support some of the views expressed and disagree with others.
I certainly believe that where a Company supplies the Phone in a vehicle which is part of the employees work equipment, it should as a minimum remind the vehicle driver of the requirements of The Highway Code and The Road Traffic Act.
I do believe that driving and talking on a mobile telephone, hand held or hands free distract attention and concentration and as such the practice clearly in my view contributes to the potential for Road Traffic Accidents with who knows what consequences.
I have first hand experience of being rear end shunted on the M1 in heavy traffic by a vehicle where the driver was using his hand held mobile.
I had twice prior to the shunt seen him in my rear view mirror, accelerating from the stop go pattern that the Motorways attract at times of peak traffic, and then observed the momentery panic on his face as he realised that the traffic in front of him had stopped, AGAIN!!!.
The third time despite me having changed lanes he hit me. Fortuneately damage was slight and injury was more to him and his deameanour than anything else.
There is however no doubt in my mind that that driver was not fully in control and was a liability and a pre-emptor of a Traffic Accident.
I believe that companies have to recognise this fact and accept some responsibility for the way mobiles are used by their drivers.
I currently live and work in Hong Kong and here on the 1st., July 2001 Road Traffic Legislation was introduced making it an offence to use and speak on and use a hand held mobile phone if you are the driver of a vehicle. (Taxi's and Public Light Buses included).
As I have said before in this forum if you take a Cantonese persons mobile away from them it is like killing them, the mobile is like their heart or lungs, without it they can't live!!!
Daily, I and colleagues travelling by road to work see 100's of motorists ignoring and probably oblivious of this new law.
The evidence of the enforcement rate I have not been able to ascertain as yet but you certainly don't see many patroling traffic police pulling motorists for the offence. I will keep monitoring however.
And at length to the scond part of your question.
I believe that there are many other areas of work and the work environment where the use of Mobile telephones are pre-emptors for or of accidents.
Crane operators, Dumptruck drivers, the Carpentar pushing the timber through the circular saw etc., etc.,
The interesting thing is that the Phone always takes priority. If it rings, even with WAP, Text, Messaging systems, vibration, flashing lights, bells and whistles, the phone dominates.
This is a worry.
If we miss a call is it so important?
If the Crane driver inching the load to it's final position and concentrating on the banksman signallers signals suddenly transfers his concentration to his ringing telephone and answers it, what is the percentage ratio of times that he can do this before this action is a contributor to an accident.
There is some information in the investigation of an Air Crash in Thailand in 1998 that shows that a number of passengers were using their Mobile Telephones, contrary to Civil Aviation safety advice.
Following the cabin announcement that the flight was diverting to another airport pasengers used their Mobiles to inform third parties of the diversion after aboting landing attempts in heavy rain, and that there meeting /collection arrangements would have to change.
Whether or not the use of the Mobiles and there operating frequency signals interfered sufficiently to conribute to the downing of the plane and the loss of some 140 lives is unclear but the suspicion is there. ( The use of the phones was established by checking the Air time accounts of the deceaseds phones.)
It is known that Mobiles and there frquencies can interfere with equipmnt in many environments, (Hospital ICU's, Laboratories, Control Rooms etc.,) and there is risk that selfish and unthinking members of society will blatantly continue using there phones regardles of risk, established and proven or suspected.
Enter Mobile telephone traffic accidents or similar as a search engine topic on your computer and see what you come up with.
All around the world mobile telecomunications are posing threats to Health and safety issues and the call for bans and enforcement laws to prevent there use in certain conditions is becoming truly International.(Particularly Driving situations).
In the UK RoSPA has done a lot of research in this area and considerable lobbying with some success. They are seeking a total ban on the use by the driver of mobile phones. The RoSpa web site has lots of information.
One thing that striks me in all these sessions of disussion on this topic is that no one to my knowledge anyway has come up with any statistics.
Can we, (Maybe IOSH as a Project) get some base line information together,What is the recorded incidence of Mobile Phone use related accidents.
All kinds and categories.
Industrial and commercial workplace use, domestic, personal and leisure use.
Do the Insurance companies have any infomation about accidents that indicate that mobile telphones were or might have been implicated. (Road traffic Accidents particularly)
How many organisations have some corporate policy, rules or procedures about Mobile Telephones, there provision, use and the retrictions, (accident prevention related).And if they have rules etc, why? What prompted them to develop them?
What about the behavioural issues, why must we recognise and answer a ringing telephone as a priority, or is this a myth.
In the age of an ever shrinking world and advancing technology, society that more and more puts its faith in gizmos and appliances, are we really awake to the potential problems and downsides arising from the appartus/equipment/resource as well as accepting its benefits?
Or are we just going to let evolution carry us along.
When shall we get the first implant mobile communication device? Will people want one? Will it be a must have? What hazards will such devices bring?
Far fetched, well maybe, but they are bringing back (for those young at heart enough to remember him from The Eagle Comic) Dan Dare!!!!
I look forward to some real and interseting debate.
Regards.
Ken Urquhart
For anyone who wants to contact me direct e-mail:
kenurquhart@pccw.com
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