CHANGES IN THE INCIDENCE OF ALCOHOL-IMPAIRED DRIVING IN THE UNITED STATES, 1973-1986.

Author(s)
Lund, A.K. & Wolff, A.C.
Year
Abstract

Studies of motor vehicle fatality data have indicated that alcohol involvement in fatal crashes has declined substantially in the United States since 1980. To determine the actual incidence of alcohol-impaired drivers on US roads, a national roadside survey using portable breath-testing devices are carried out in 32 localities in the spring of 1986. The same sampling design and survey procedures used in a 1973 national roadside survey were followed as much as possible. The 1986 survey found 3.1% of the late-night weekend drivers to have a blood alcohol concentration (BAC) of 0.10% or more, compared to 4.9% of drivers in 1973. Similarly, 8.3% of the 1986 drivers were at or above 0.05% BAC, compared to 13.5% in 1973. The data indicate that the incidence of alcohol-impaired driving on weekend nights has fallen by one-third or more in the United States since 1973 and that the decline affected most population sub-groups.(Author/publisher).

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Publication

Library number
I 841811 /83 / IRRD 841811
Source

Journal Of Studies On Alcohol. 1991 /07. 52(4) Pp293-301 (25 Refs.)

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.