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Fatigue  

Tiredness affects your ability to concentrate.

Professional risk analysts believe that fatigue lies behind many crashes.

Driver sleepiness is thought to cause at least twenty percent of all motorway and trunk road accidents.

Most accidents happen between 2am - 6am and mid afternoon between 2pm - 4pm, when the body's natural clock is set at daily low points.

Falling asleep at the wheel is increasingly preceded by feelings of increasing sleepiness. If you feel tired:

get off the road - find a safe parking place

take a fifteen minute nap
drink one or two cans of energy drink

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A can of functional energy drink will almost eliminate this level of sleepiness and sleep related driving impairments for about 90 minutes after being absorbed. But nevertheless, drivers should get adequate sleep, and not see functional energy drinks as a substitute for sleep.

Men are more at risk of having a sleep related accident as they drive faster, have an over-confident image of their driving skills and are less likely to stop and take a break if they feel tired. They will wind down the window, turn up the radio, stretch etc, but drive on. Neither these latter methods nor the willpower to stay awake have much effect in overcoming sleepiness.

Avoid long journeys in the morning without a good night’s sleep, or in the evening after a full day’s work.
Plan your journey to include proper breaks. A minimum of at least 10 minutes after every two hours driving is sensible.
   

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Stress
Commuting, traffic jams, white van men, suicidal couriers, psychotic truckers, the school run, cones, bicycles, parking fines, fuel shortages, snow, ice, rain and fog - a kind of waking nightmare?

Stress can get a hold on you. Counter-measures include adjusting to your lifestyle to avoid some areas of needless anxiety if possible and/or seeking help in coping with them.

Do you have to wear a groove in the road between home and work, do you have to? Can you share the commute with a neighbourly colleague ?

How about a change of your route ? It's as good as a rest, and there may be (well, it's possible) less traffic.

Can you change the time you travel ? Leaving home half an hour earlier - or later - can make a big difference to your journey time.

Maybe you could use other forms of transport for a couple of days each week?