Minor tranquillisers and road accidents.

Author(s)
Skegg, D.C.G. Richards, S.M. & Doll, R.
Year
Abstract

In a prospective study of 43117 people, prescriptions issued by general practitioners over two years were linked with records of hospital admissions and deaths. For 57 people injured or killed while driving cars, motor-cycles, or bicycles the medicines that had been dispensed in the three months before were compared with those dispensed for 1425 matched controls. There was a highly significant association between use of minor tranquillisers and the risk of a serious road accident (relative risk estimate 4.9). The increased risk of accidents to drivers given tranquillisers could be due to the known psychomotor effects of these drugs or to effects of the conditions being treated. Whatever the reason, patients taking drugs such as diazepam should be warned that they are at special risk. (Author/publisher).

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Publication

Library number
B 19464 fo /83/ IRRD 240619
Source

British Medical Journal, No. 6168 (7 April 1979), p. 917-919, 17 ref.

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