Effectiveness of bans and laws in reducing traffic deaths : legalized Sunday packaged alcohol sales and alcohol-related traffic crashes and crash fatalities in New Mexico.

Author(s)
McMillan, G.P. & Lapham, S.
Year
Abstract

The authors determined the relative risk of alcohol-related motor vehicle accidents and fatalities after New Mexico lifted its ban on Sunday packaged alcohol sales. They extracted all alcohol-related crashes from New Mexico police reports for 3652 days between July 1, 1990, and June 30, 2000, and found a 29% increase in alcohol-related crashes and a 42% increase in alcohol-related crash fatalities on Sundays after the ban on Sunday packaged alcohol sales was lifted. There was an estimated excess of 543.1 alcohol-related crashes and 41.6 alcohol-related crash fatalities on Sundays after the ban was lifted. Repealing the ban on Sunday packaged alcohol sales introduced a public health and safety hazard in New Mexico. (Author/publisher)

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Publication

Library number
C 37523 [electronic version only]
Source

American Journal of Public Health, Vol. 96 (2006), No. 11 (November), p. 1944-1948, 26 ref.

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