UNTHSC researchers release significant findings on texting while driving

UNT Health Science Center School of Public Health professors Fernando Wilson, PhD, and Jim Stimpson, PhD, have recently released a report in the American Journal of Public Health showing that texting while driving resulted in an estimated 16,000 fatalities in the U.S. from 2001 to 2007. The report indicates that a growing percentage of distracted drivers in fatal crashes are males driving alone in collisions with roadside obstructions.

Wilson, assistant professor of Health Management and Policy, and Stimpson, assistant professor of Social and Behavioral Sciences, analyzed traffic fatalities across the nation from 1999 to 2008 in what is being noted as one of the first efforts to place a scientific number on the amount of motor vehicle deaths resulting from cell phone use.

The report used data from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration on motor vehicle deaths in each state and Federal Communications Commission (FCC) reports on increasing cell phone ownership and texting volume over the targeted years.  They noted that in 2002, one billion texts were sent every month on average, and this number grew exponentially to 110 billion by 2008.  For every one million new cell phone subscribers, Wilson and Stimpson estimate a 19 percent rise in deaths from distracted driving.  The researchers concluded that the recent and rapid increases in cell phone usage and texting may be responsible for thousands of additional road fatalities annually in the United States.

Recent News

Screenshot 2025 03 03 080243
  • Community
|Mar 18, 2025

Daughter, sister, wife, mother and TCOM student

The first year of medical school for most students on a scale of 1 to 10 is about an 11, but for Alicia Segovia, that number more than likely is incalculable. She had just left her home in Laredo, her family, her husband and her young daughter to start at the Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine at...
Kyokodrboone
  • Community
|Mar 12, 2025

TCOM alumnus establishes Dr. William R. Boone Jr. and Kyoko Nakamizo Scholars Program

He practiced osteopathic medicine following in his father’s footsteps, lived a simple life, drove a modest car and took care of his community for decades as a family medicine physician. Now, Dr. William R. Boone and his wife Kyoko Nakamizo are giving back to the medical school that made it all pos...
82da9e3b 210a 432e 9eab Fe9c8a1fd7c6
  • Community
|Mar 11, 2025

Whole Health Focus: Taekwondo

Taekwondo is widely known as a Korean martial art sport involving various kicking and punching techniques. What many don’t know is that Taekwondo is so much more – it’s a practice built on five tenets: courtesy, integrity, perseverance, self-control and indomitable spirit. For Dr. Dimitrios Ka...
Img 0947 731x1024
  • Community
|Mar 11, 2025

UNTHSC student earns heart association fellowship for nicotine addiction research

Nana Kofi Kusi-Boadum, a Ph.D. candidate in the College of Biomedical and Translational Sciences at The University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth, was awarded a prestigious American Heart Association predoctoral fellowship to support his research project exploring the nervous sys...