Crash culpability and the role of driver blood alcohol levels.

Author(s)
Kufera, J.A. Soderstrom, C.A. Dischinger, P.C. Ho, S.M. & Shepard, A.
Year
Abstract

Twenty years ago the American Medical Association reported the relationship between blood alcohol concentration (BAC) and crash causation. This study addresses culpability, age, gender and BAC in a population of drivers injured in motor vehicle crashes. Five years of hospital and crash data were linked, using probabilistic techniques. Trends in culpability were analysed by BAC category. Given BAC level, the youngest and oldest drivers were more likely to have caused their crash. Women drivers had significantly higher odds of culpability at the highest BAC levels. Seatbelt use was also associated with culpability, perhaps as a marker for risk-taking among drinkers. (Author/publisher)

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Publication

Library number
20062291 f ST (In: ST 20062291 CD-ROM)
Source

In: Proceedings of the 50th Annual Conference of the Association for the Advancement of Automotive Medicine AAAM, Chicago, Illinois, October 16-18, 2006, p. 91-106, 29 ref.

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