Patterns of drug use in fatal crashes.

Author(s)
Romano, E. & Pollini, R.A.
Year
Abstract

Aim of this research was to characterize drug prevalence among fatally injured drivers, identify significant associations (i.e. day of week, time of day, age, gender), and to compare findings with those for alcohol. Design were descriptive and logistic mixed-model regression analyses of Fatality Analysis Reporting System data. The setting consisted of US states with drug test results for>80% of fatally injured drivers, 1998–2010. The research focussed on drivers killed in single-vehicle crashes on public roads who died at the scene of the crash (n=16 942). Measurements were drug test results, blood alcohol concentration (BAC), gender, age and day and time of crash. Findings showed that overall, 45.1% of fatally injured drivers tested positive for alcohol (39.9% BAC 0.08) and 25.9% for drugs. The most common drugs present were stimulants (7.2%) and cannabinols (7.1%), followed by ‘other’ drugs (4.1%), multiple drugs (4.1%), narcotics (2.1%) and depressants (1.5%). Drug-involved crashes occurred with relative uniformity throughout the day while alcohol-involved crashes were more common at night (P<0.01). The odds of testing positive for drugs varied depending upon drug class, driver characteristics, time of day and the presence of alcohol.Conclusions Fatal single-vehicle crashes involving drugs are less common than those involving alcohol and the characteristics of drug-involved crashes differ, depending upon drug class and whether alcohol is present. Concerns about drug-impaired driving should not detract from the current law enforcement focus on alcohol-impaired driving. (Author/publisher)

Publication

Library number
20130910 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Addiction, Vol. 108 (2013), No. 8 (August), p. 1428-1438, 30 ref.

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