The Road Safety Monitor 2006 : drinking and driving.

Author(s)
Vanlaar, W. Simpson, H.M. Mayhew, D.R. & Robertson, R.
Year
Abstract

The Road Safety Monitor (RSM) is an annual public opinion survey developed and conducted by the Traffic Injury Research Foundation (TIRF) to take the pulse of the nation on key road safety issues. The survey examines: • what Canadians see as priority road safety issues and how concerned they are about them; • their views about how to deal with these problems; • what they know and don’t know about safe driving practices; and • how they behave on the highways. The RSM includes a core set of questions that are asked each year to provide information on trends in attitudes, opinions and behaviours. This is supplemented each year by a set of questions that probe more deeply into special, topical, and emerging issues. This report describes the findings from the 2006 RSM regarding the issue of drinking and driving. Context is provided to discuss these results and to compare them with the results of previous years. (Author/publisher)

Publication

Library number
C 37557 [electronic version only]
Source

Ottawa, Ontario, Traffic Injury Research Foundation of Canada TIRF, 2006, III + 35 p., 15 ref. - ISBN 978-0-920071-62-5

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.