Drinking location and risk of alcohol-impaired driving among high school seniors.

Author(s)
Lee, J.A. Jones-Webb, R.J. Short, B.J. & Wagenaar, A.C.
Year
Abstract

This study investigated environmental predictors of teenagers' alcohol-impaired driving, such as drinking location and alcohol source. Data for this study were part of the 15 Communities Mobilizing for Change on Alcohol Project. Relationships between drinking-driver status, alcohol source, drinking location, alcohol consumption, and individual demographics were determined for the full sample as well as for males and females seperately, using mixed-model, logistic regression. Analyses were restricted to high school seniors who were drivers and who consumed alcohol within the last 30 days (N = 1,914). For males and females, the risk of alcohol-impaired driving rose significantly with increases in both the number of binge-drinking events and estimates of the number of drinks required to impair their driving. Drinking location was important in that students who drank outdoors or in a moving car or truck were at significant risk for drinking-driving. Drinking-driving risks specific to females were number of drinking occasions and drinking at someone else's house. Strategies to prevent drinking-driving among teenagers need to consider patterns as well as drinking locations for both males and females. (A)

Publication

Library number
971475 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Addictive Behaviors, Vol. 22 (1997), No. 3 (May-June), p. 387-393, 21 ref.

Our collection

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