Back to Search
Start Over
Patterns of drinking four weeks prior to an alcohol-related vehicular crash
- Source :
- Traffic injury prevention. 6(2)
- Publication Year :
- 2005
-
Abstract
- The primary objective of the study was to determine if drinking patterns on the days immediately prior to an alcohol-related motor vehicle crash (ARMVC) were significantly different than drinking patterns in the weeks prior to the crash.Following ARMVC, 187 hospitalized non-alcohol dependent young-adults (43 females, 144 males) were enrolled. Mean age was 29.03 years, mean blood alcohol level was 165.18 mg/dL, and mean injury severity score was 10.50. When alcohol-free, subjects were interviewed by nurse clinicians to determine the quantity/frequency of alcohol consumption during the 28 days prior to the crash. Subjects reported the number of standard drinks using the Timeline Followback procedure. Total drinks/day were determined, with day 1 considered 4 weeks prior to the crash and day 28 the day of the crash. A random-intercepts general linear mixed model (GLMM) was used to test the effect of several covariates (segment 1 [days 1-26], segment 2 [days 27-28], age, sex, race, holiday/non-holiday period, driver/passenger status, and weekend/weekday crash) on the amount of standard drinks/day.There was no significant interaction among the covariates. The only significant predictors of drinks/day were segment 2 (b = .322, p.0001) and gender (b = -.221, p = .016). The positive, statistically significant slope for segment 2 indicated an increase in consumption of drinks/day in the two-day period prior to the ARMVC and the negative slope for gender indicated greater consumption of drinks/day for men than women.Persons injured in an ARMVC had a significant increase in alcohol consumption on the day before and the day of vehicular crashes (days 27 and 28) as compared to the first 26 days in the 28-day period preceding the crash. When non-alcohol-dependent subjects are counseled to reduce their risk of traffic crashes, they should be alerted that when their patterns of drinking change, they are at higher risk than usual for a crash.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Male
Pediatrics
medicine.medical_specialty
Self Disclosure
Time Factors
Adolescent
Alcohol Drinking
Poison control
Crash
Alcohol
Transport engineering
chemistry.chemical_compound
Injury Severity Score
Sex Factors
Injury prevention
Medicine
Humans
Timeline followback
business.industry
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Accidents, Traffic
Middle Aged
Nurse clinicians
chemistry
Female
business
Safety Research
Alcoholic Intoxication
Motor vehicle crash
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15389588
- Volume :
- 6
- Issue :
- 2
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Traffic injury prevention
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....c2d7b027e636513076fe90ea3370de72