The impact of lowering the illegal BAC limit to 0.08 in five states in the United States.

Author(s)
Johnson, D. & Fell, J.
Year
Abstract

This paper is also published in the proceedings of the thirty-ninth annual conference of the Association for the Advancement of Automotive Medicine AAAM, Chicago, USA, October 16-18, 1995 p. 45-64 and for the abstract see IRRD 880027: It is illegal per se to have a certain blood alcohol concentration (BAC) while driving a motor vehicle in most states of th U.S. The majority of these states have set the illegal BAC limit at 0.10g/dl for drivers aged 21 and over. However, eleven states have lowered the limit to 0.08g/dl. An analysis was conducted using fatal crash data to determine the impact of lowering the per se limit limit to 0.08 in five of these states which had the law for the last two years. The results of the analyses revealed statistically significant reductions of driver involvement in alcohol-related fatal crashes after 0.08 legislation took effect in four of the five states, ranging from 4% in California to 40% in Vermont. This assessment appears to California to 40% in Vermont. This assessment appears to indicate that the implementation of 0.08 laws and other related activities are associated with reductions in fatal crash driver alcohol involvement. (A)

Publication

Library number
C 7595 (In: C 7541 a) /83 / IRRD 868635
Source

In: Alcohol, drugs and traffic safety : proceedings of the 13th International Conference on Alcohol, Drugs and Traffic Safety T'95, held under the auspices of the International Committee on Alcohol, Drugs and Traffic Safety ICADTS, Adelaide, 13-18 August 1995, Volume 1, p. 361-366, 10 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.