Crash characteristics and injuries of victims impaired by alcohol versus illicit drugs.

Author(s)
Waller, P.F. Blow, F.C. Maio, R.F. Singer, K. Hill, E.M. & Schaefer, N.
Year
Abstract

Alcohol has long been associated with injury, but the relationship between other drugs and injury is less clear. Blood samples from 894 patients presenting to two Emergency Departments for treatment of motor vehicle injury sustained in passenger cars, station wagons, vans, and pickup trucks, were tested for alcohol and other drugs. Results were related to demographic characteristics, including prior history of alcohol and drug use; crash characteristics; and injury characteristics. Alcohol was associated with more severe crashes, but other drugs, in the absence of alcohol, were not. The crashes involving drugs but no alcohol were very similar to those involving neither alcohol nor drugs. (A)

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Publication

Library number
C 4708 (In: C 4701 S) /80 /83 / IRRD 880030
Source

In: Proceedings of the 39th Annual Conference of the Association for the Advancement of Automotive Medicine AAAM, Chicago, October 16-18, 1995, p. 89-104, 21 ref.

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