A COMPARISON OF THE PSYCHOSOCIAL CHARACTERISTICS OF ALCOHOLICS RESPONSIBLE FOR IMPAIRED AND NONIMPAIRED COLLISIONS

Author(s)
MACDONALD, S ADDICTION RES FOUNDATION, WESTERN ONTARIO UNIV, CANADA
Year
Abstract

In this study, the psychosocial characteristics of male alcoholics with different collision records were examined. Male hospitalizedalcoholics were divided into three gorups: (1) collision-free drivers, (2) those responsible for collision(s) in which they were impaired by alcohol, and (3) those responsible for collision(s) in which they were not impaired by alcohol. People in each of the three groupswere compared. People responsible for impaired collision were significantly lower in socioeconomic status, drove while impaired with more dangerous styles of driving, and had more disrespect for authorities than the noncollision group. By contrast, those responsible for nonimpaired collisions possessed a variety of personality characteristics that distinguished them from people with no collisions. Specifically, those with nonimpaired collisions were significantly less responsible, more impulsive, more depressed, more aggressive, and experienced more undesirable life events than people without collisions.the results are suggestive that male alcoholics with impaired collisions might have differences from those people with nonimpaired collisions that enhance their driving risk. (a).

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Publication

Library number
I 824362 IRRD 8911
Source

ACCIDENT ANALYSIS AND PREVENTION 1989 /10 E21 5 PAG:493-508 T59

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