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Thu, Jul 31, 2008 12:30 EDT

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Posted by: Al Sacco in Soapbox Topic: Personal ManagementBlog: Mobile WorkHorse
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It seems like common sense: walking, or worse, biking down a busy city street while texting on a BlackBerry or other mobile device is not a very bright idea. However, U.S. emergency room physicians say that's just the problem. A growing number of Americans, particularly teenagers and young adults, are demonstrating a surprising lack of common sense when it comes to texting and "multitasking"—and texting-related injuries, such as lacerated faces and sprained ankles, are increasing accordingly.
The American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) this week issued a warning about the potential dangers of texting while walking, driving, biking or rollerblading; it hopes to raise awareness around the issue as teenagers return to school this fall. The statement follows an informal survey circulated between ACEP members that found that doctors around the country are seeing a rise in injuries involving text-messaging pedestrians, bicyclists, rollerbladers and motorists, according to the AP.
Teenagers may be the most prone to injuring themselves in this fashion, but in my personal experience, just as many adult professionals carelessly type away while plowing through crowds as do adolescents. After all, most BlackBerry users are businesspeople who have smartphones so they can catch up with work on the go. And sometimes that means texting while running to the next meeting or while trying to hail a cab to the airport.
It's easy to scoff at the ACEP warning or dismiss it as medical PR—as I've been wont to do in the past—but the group also offered up some frightening examples of why you should take heed. Dr. Matthew Lewin, MD, PhD, an emergency physician at University of California San Francisco Hospital, cites the time he saw a woman who was texting step off a curb and get flung 30 or so feet in the air by a passing pickup truck. She later died in the trauma center of Lewin's hospital.
Dr. Paul Walsh, an emergency room doctor based in Bakersfield, Calif., tells a similar story in which a 50-year-old man was struck by a vehicle while crossing the road and speaking to his wife on a mobile phone. He too died from related injuries.
For me, this warning hits close to home, as I'm always texting and multitasking—though I don't own a bicycle and wouldn't be caught dead wearing a pair of rollerblades. In fact, I have a vivid memory of leaving an MIT Sloan CIO Symposium in a rush to catch the train, clacking away on my BlackBerry and tripping on a rather large pot hole just before the sidewalk met Massachusetts Ave. I twisted my ankle, sang a chorus of colorful expletives and landed on top of my BlackBerry, in the middle of the road. Had a car been coming, I might not be writing this post today.
My point: we can all learn something from this warning and the following five tips from Dr. Linda Lawrence, ACEP president.
Ah yes, the increasing problem of the dangers of "text walking." They are having these problems in London also (see http://commandocivility.wordpress.com/2008/03/09/device-paralysis/). Perhaps not as dangerous, but certainly annoying is "Device Paralysis" - also discussed in link above.
Agree.. and more to come.. watch below
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=klteYv1Uv9A
I tell my students not to do this, but I am guilty of texting ot at least talking on the phone -- either for work or pleasure -- in the face of oncoming traffic. After all, who notices a red light when a client is thrilled to be talking to a real New Yorker with real NYC background noises and the energy is palpable?
I will soon be learning to drive and I already know that the only way to avoid having to take a call is to turn the phone off before stepping into the vehicle.
So far, I have been lucky. I would like to remain alive and sentient.