Recently in Trucking Accident Category

September 10, 2010

Trucking Accidents Linked to Sleep Apnea

In etrucker, it was reported that because of the link between sleep apnea and trucking accidents, a task force of medical experts is calling for new screening procedures for obstructive sleep apnea among drivers of commercial vehicles.

In a supplement to the September issue of the Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, the task force recommends a more thorough screening and evaluation process and modified criteria for follow-up, recertification and returning to work after treatment.

A 2002 study sponsored by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration and the American Trucking Associations estimated that nearly one in three commercial truck drivers suffers from mild to severe obstructive sleep apnea -- a struggle to breathe during sleep, usually accompanied by terrible snoring. Besides sleeplessness, apnea can cause acid reflux and other health problems and be life-threatening if combined with heart trouble. Reggie White, a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, died in 2004 of an apnea attack at age 43.

The latest task force is made up of representatives of the American College of Chest Physicians, the American College of Occupational and Environmental Medicine and the National Sleep Foundation.

"Sleepiness and inattention contribute to a significant number of CMV crashes each year, and OSA has been shown to significantly increase a driver's risk of driving drowsy," said Dr. Nancy Collop of the ACCP Sleep Institute. "Yet, current CMV screening and treatment procedures for OSA are ambiguous and not reflective of the latest advancements in the diagnosis and management of OSA."

Conflicting approaches to screening have left too many drivers undiagnosed, which puts them and the public at risk, Collop said.

Current FMCSA guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of sleep apnea are based on a 1991 report sponsored by the Federal Highway Administration. The guidelines say that drivers must have "no established medical history or clinical diagnosis of respiratory dysfunction likely to interfere with the ability to control and drive a commercial motor vehicle."

The task force recommends a more extensive screening of drivers' medical and physical history, flagging such risk factors as body mass index, neck circumference or a family history of apnea. It also recommends that medical certification for drivers be based on the severity of sleep apnea. Low-risk drivers should be certified for a maximum of three months, and drivers with more severe risk factors should be prevented from returning to work until they receive a medical evaluation, the task force says.

Although the task force recommends stricter screening, it also suggests a shorter return-to-work time. Under current FMCSA guidelines, drivers being treated for sleep apnea can return to work one month after initial treatment. The task force recommends reducing that period to two weeks, with a re-evaluation after four weeks.

But as etrucker emphasizes, "Sleep apnea is a highly treatable disorder," said Dr. Barbara Phillips of the National Sleep Foundation. "The new return-to-work standards we suggest are more reflective of current clinical knowledge related to the treatment of sleep apnea."

In many cases, apnea now is treated not by medication or surgery but by having the patient simply wear a breathing mask through which air gently flows, to keep the airways clear.

It is baffling why this obviously chronic and deadly issue is going unresolved. It is scary driving on the road, knowing that the person in the truck next to you quite possibly suffers from sleep apnea, and is therefore, a tragedy waiting to happen.

May 25, 2010

Dallas Trucking Accident Kills Driver Who Stopped For Flat Tire

According to the Dallas Morning News, a Dallas woman was killed this morning when a tractor-trailer slammed into her car as she pulled onto LBJ Freeway in Balch Springs after a flat tire, police said.
Fatal crash on freeway. Police said the truck driver didn't see the car in time to stop.

Trucking accidents are consistently the cause of deaths on our Texas Highways and streets. In fact, according to the FMCSA, 4995 people were killed in trucking accidents in 2006, while 106,000 were injured. That is just too much. Yet anyone who has driven next to an 18-wheeler that seems "asleep at the wheel" knows that the problem is out there, and without proper interference, it is just a matter of time until that driver hurts or kills an innocent person.

Our firm routinely comes across cases where trucking negligence has destroyed lives. Good people minding their own business, who simply "got in the way" of a monstrous death trap. When truck drivers and their employers engage in activities, such as doctoring log books, drug use, and violating traffic laws and federal regulations, they must be held accountable. They risk so much when they hit the roads, showing total disregard to the innocent people whose lives are placed at risk.

Hopefully this family will be able to begin to put their lives together, and hold the trucking company liable for anything they did that was negligent