Fatigued or drowsy driving is widely recognized as a contributor to fatal crashes involving large trucks. Stress associated with working as a truck driver (e.g., irregular schedules, long work hours, and economic pressures) may put these drivers at risk for insufficient sleep and/or irregular sleep behaviors or patterns.
A study done by NIOSH in collaboration with the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute examined sleep patterns of 96 commercial truck drivers during their non-work periods and evaluated the influence of these sleep patterns on subsequent truck-driving performance during work periods. Driving performance was measured by safety-critical events (SCEs), which include crashes, near-crashes, crash-relevant conflicts, and unintentional lane deviations.
The statistical analysis grouped each work shift into one of four distinct sleep patterns:
- Moderate sleep averaging 6.7 hours: In general, sleep started in the middle of the non-work period and lasted approximately half of the non-work period.
- Short sleep averaging 5.8 hours: Sleep started at the beginning of the non-work period and lasted on average for 44% of the non-work period.
- Long sleep averaging 8.1 hours: In general, sleep occupied two-thirds of the non-work period.
- Long sleep averaging 9.3 hours: Sleep occupied almost the entire non-work period, 93% on average.
Study results show the importance of drivers’ receiving adequate sleep the night prior to their driving and underscore the importance of providing drivers with sufficient sleep opportunities. The results of this study suggest that longer sleep duration has a measurable safety benefit by reducing SCE risk in the following shift.
Findings from this study highlight the importance of driver training and fatigue prevention among truck drivers. Prevention strategies include educating drivers on the safety benefits of adequate sleep, getting sleep between 1 and 5 a.m., and arranging sleep late in the non-working period if possible. More sleep tips are available in NIOSH’s Quick Sleep Tips for Truck Drivers .
Publication: Chen GX, Fang YJ, Guo F, Hanowski RJ. The influence of daily sleep patterns of commercial truck drivers on driving performance. Accident Analysis and Prevention 2016; 91: 55−63.