Drinking-driving behavior of young men in relation to accidents.

D C Pelz, T L McDole, S H Schuman
Author Information

Abstract

To determine the role of drinking in the accidents of young men, data were examined from a representative survey sample of 1670 young men in south-eastern Michigan and from official accident statistics of 4 states. By age 20 over half the sampled men drank at least once weekly and drove at least once monthly after drinking. Alcohol was involved in 3-8% of all crashes of 20-year-olds. The highest accident rates without alcohol involvement occurred at ages 18-20, whereas the most alcohol-involved accidents occured at ages 22-24.

MeSH Term

Accidents, Traffic
Adolescent
Adult
Age Factors
Alcohol Drinking
Attitude
Automobile Driving
Colorado
Hostility
Humans
Legislation as Topic
Male
Michigan
Mortality
Social Alienation
Texas
Wounds and Injuries

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0menaccidentsyoungdrinkingaccidentleastagesdetermineroledataexaminedrepresentativesurveysample1670south-easternMichiganofficialstatistics4statesage20halfsampleddrankweeklydrovemonthlyAlcoholinvolved3-8%crashes20-year-oldshighestrateswithoutalcoholinvolvementoccurred18-20whereasalcohol-involvedoccured22-24Drinking-drivingbehaviorrelation

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