Teens text more while driving than parents think, study says

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LOS ANGELES (Bloomberg) -- Teenagers are 26 times more likely to send text messages while driving than their parents expect, based on preliminary results of a safety study by Toyota Motor Corp. and the University of Michigan.

The survey by Asia’s largest automaker and the school’s Transportation Research Institute of more than 5,500 people, consisting of drivers age 16 to 18 and their parents, also found 69 percent of teens regularly drive with other teenagers and no adults, Toyota said in a statement today.

“Teens read or send text messages once a trip 26 times more often than their parents think they do,” Toyota said in the statement. Some 54 percent of teens surveyed in the study also said they use a hand-held mobile phone while driving.

The study is part of efforts by Toyota to boost vehicle safety after record recalls of Toyota vehicles in 2009 and 2010 for gasoline-pedal defects. The company said in January 2011 it would spend $50 million over five years on a Collaborative Safety Research Center at its technical center in Ann Arbor, Mich., to find ways to reduce auto fatalities.

Automotive crashes are the leading cause of death for U.S. teens, with seven drivers between age 16 and 19 dying daily in 2010 as a result of accidents, Toyota said, citing the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

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