Visual Fatigue: Lighting, Glare and Worker Performance Stats and Facts

FACTS

  • Eye Strain and Headaches: Long hours at screens or under poor lighting reduce blink rate by nearly 70%, causing dry eye, headaches, and blurred vision.
  • Glare and Reflected Light: Direct or reflected light on monitors, windshields, and polished surfaces forces the eye to constantly refocus, accelerating fatigue and slowing reaction time.
  • Inadequate Illumination: Dim work areas hide trip hazards, moving parts, and pinch points; low light levels are repeatedly linked to slips, falls, and machinery incidents.
  • Flicker: Aging fluorescents and poor-quality LEDs flicker at frequencies the eye cannot consciously detect, triggering headaches, nausea, and fatigue.
  • Night and Shift Work: Working against circadian rhythm reduces alertness and visual processing; 17 hours awake produces impairment equivalent to a 0.05 BAC.
  • Sun and Headlight Glare: Direct sunlight, oncoming headlights, and snow or water reflection cause temporary blindness and slow visual recovery in seconds.
  • Fatigue-Driven Errors: Tired eyes lead to misread gauges, missed signals, missed pedestrians, and missed steps — turning routine tasks into incident reports.

STATS

  • NIOSH reports U.S. office workers spend an average of 7.5 hours per day on screens, with blink rate dropping by nearly 70% during sustained screen focus.
  • The U.S. BLS recorded 5,283 fatal work injuries in 2023, with transportation incidents accounting for 36.8% — a leading category strongly tied to driver fatigue and visual impairment.
  • NHTSA estimates approximately 1 in 5 fatal U.S. crashes involve a drowsy driver.
  • The FMCSA Large Truck Crash Causation Study found driver fatigue associated with 13% of investigated truck crashes.
  • NIOSH and FMCSA research confirm that 17 consecutive hours awake produce impairment equivalent to a 0.05 blood alcohol concentration.
  • FHWA reported 176 pedestrians struck and killed in U.S. work zones in 2023, with low-light visibility cited among contributing factors.
  • OSHA’s construction lighting rule (29 CFR 1926.56) sets minimum illumination levels, yet inadequate lighting remains a recurring contributing factor in NIOSH FACE slip, trip, and struck-by fatality reports.