(Press-News.org) Contact information: Inga Kiderra
ikiderra@ucsd.edu
858-822-0661
University of California - San Diego
Unsafe at any level
Very low blood alcohol content associated with causing car crashes
Even "minimally buzzed" drivers are more often to blame for fatal car crashes than the sober drivers they collide with, reports a University of California, San Diego study of accidents in the United States .
Led by UC San Diego sociologist David Phillips and published in the British Medical Journal group's Injury Prevention, the study examined 570,731 fatal collisions, from 1994 to 2011.
The researchers used the official U.S. Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS) database for the study, because it is nationally comprehensive and because it reports on blood alcohol content (BAC) in increments of 0.01 percent. They focus particularly on "buzzed drivers," with BAC of 0.01 to 0.07 percent, and, within this group, the "minimally buzzed" (or BAC 0.01 percent).
Phillips and his co-authors find that drivers with BAC 0.01 percent – well below the U.S. legal limit of 0.08 – are 46 percent more likely to be officially and solely blamed by accident investigators than are the sober drivers they collide with.
The authors also find no "threshold effect" – "no sudden transition from blameless to blamed" at the legal limit for drunk driving. Instead, blame increases steadily and smoothly from BAC 0.01to 0.24 percent.
Despite this evidence, "buzzed" drivers are often not punished more severely than their sober counterparts. In practice, Phillips said, police, judges and the public at large treat BAC 0.08 percent as "a sharp, definitive, meaningful boundary," and do not impose severe penalties on those below the legal limit. That needs to change, Phillips said. "The law should reflect what official accident investigators are seeing."
The researchers measured blame by looking at more than 50 driver factors coded in the FARS database, including such "unambiguous" factors as driving through a red light or driving on the wrong side of the road.
Many of the study's analyses take advantage of what the authors call "a natural experiment": two-vehicle collisions between a sober and a drinking driver. "Because the two drivers collide in exactly the same circumstances and at exactly the same time," they write, "this natural experiment automatically standardizes many potentially confounding variables," including weather and roadway conditions.
The findings are unequivocal, Phillips said. "We find no safe combination of drinking and driving – no point at which it is harmless to consume alcohol and get behind the wheel of a car," Phillips said. "Our data support both the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration's campaign that 'Buzzed driving is drunk driving' and the recommendation made by the National Transportation Safety Board, to reduce the legal limit to BAC 0.05 percent. In fact, our data provide support for yet greater reductions in the legal BAC."
Phillips noted that, although federal agencies recommend reducing the legal BAC limit below 0.08 percent, there has been very little research on the dangers of driving at very low levels of BAC. "We appear to be the first researchers to have provided nationwide evidence on traffic accidents caused by minimally buzzed drivers," he said.
More than 100 countries around the world have limits set at BAC 0.05 percent or below.
In calling on all 50 U.S. states to follow suit, NTSB Chairman Deborah A.P. Hersman said in a statement last spring: "Alcohol-impaired crashes are not accidents. They are crimes. They can – and should – be prevented. The tools exist. What is needed is the will."
###
Study coauthors are: Rebecca Moshfegh, an undergraduate student in the UC San Diego Department of Economics, and Ana Luisa Sousa, a recent sociology graduate of UC San Diego, currently at the USC Gould School of Law.
The current study follows up on a paper Phillips published in 2011 showing that buzzed driving is associated with greater accident severity.
Unsafe at any level
Very low blood alcohol content associated with causing car crashes
2014-01-16
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Meltwater from Tibetan glaciers floods pastures
2014-01-16
Meltwater from Tibetan glaciers floods pastures
Glaciers are important indicators of climate change. Global warming causes mountain glaciers to melt, which, apart from the shrinking of the Greenlandic and Antarctic ice sheets, is regarded as one of the main ...
Typhoid fever -- A race against time
2014-01-16
Typhoid fever -- A race against time
The life-threatening disease typhoid fever results from the ongoing battle between the bacterial pathogen Salmonella and the immune cells of the body. Prof. Dirk Bumann's research group at the Biozentrum of the University of Basel has ...
Stem cells overcome damage in other cells by exporting mitochondria
2014-01-16
Stem cells overcome damage in other cells by exporting mitochondria
EU could cut emissions by 40 percent at moderate cost
2014-01-16
EU could cut emissions by 40 percent at moderate cost
This is a key finding from an international multi-model analysis by the Stanford Energy Modeling Forum (EMF28) and comes at a crucial time, as the European Commission is set ...
Discovery of quantum vibrations in 'microtubules' corroborates theory of consciousness
2014-01-16
Discovery of quantum vibrations in 'microtubules' corroborates theory of consciousness
Amsterdam, January 16, 2014 – A review and update of a controversial 20-year-old theory of consciousness published in Physics of Life Reviews claims that consciousness derives from ...
Loss of biodiversity limits toxin degradation
2014-01-16
Loss of biodiversity limits toxin degradation
You might not think of microbes when you consider biodiversity, but it turns out that even a moderate loss of less than 5% of soil microbes may compromise some key ecosystem functions and could lead to lower degradation of toxins in ...
Silver nanowire sensors hold promise for prosthetics, robotics
2014-01-16
Silver nanowire sensors hold promise for prosthetics, robotics
North Carolina State University researchers have used silver nanowires to develop wearable, multifunctional sensors that could be used in biomedical, military or athletic applications, including ...
Researchers 'detune' a molecule
2014-01-16
Researchers 'detune' a molecule
Rice University experiment shows how to soften atomic bonds in a buckyball
Rice University scientists have found they can control the bonds between atoms in a molecule.
The molecule in question is carbon-60, also known as the buckminsterfullerene ...
Waterfowl poisoning halved by lead shot prohibition
2014-01-16
Waterfowl poisoning halved by lead shot prohibition
Lead shot was forbidden in 2001 in Spanish wetlands on the Ramsar List of these areas of international importance. Ten years later, this prohibition -and the consequent use of steel shot ...
Novel technology reveals aerodynamics of birds flying in a V-formation
2014-01-16
Novel technology reveals aerodynamics of birds flying in a V-formation
Researchers using custom-built GPS and accelerometer loggers, developed with funding from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, (EPSRC), ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Evidence of a subsurface lava tube on Venus
New trial aims to transform how we track our daily diet
People are more helpful when in poor environments
How big can a planet be? With very large gas giants, it can be hard to tell
New method measures energy dissipation in the smallest devices
More than 1,000 institutions worldwide now partner with MDPI on open access
Chronic alcohol use reshapes gene expression in key human brain regions linked to relapse vulnerability and neural damage
Have associations between historical redlining and breast cancer survival changed over time?
Brief, intensive exercise helps patients with panic disorder more than standard care
How to “green” operating rooms: new guideline advises reduce, reuse, recycle, and rethink
What makes healthy boundaries – and how to implement them – according to a psychotherapist
UK’s growing synthetic opioid problem: Nitazene deaths could be underestimated by a third
How rice plants tell head from toe during early growth
Scientists design solar-responsive biochar that accelerates environmental cleanup
Construction of a localized immune niche via supramolecular hydrogel vaccine to elicit durable and enhanced immunity against infectious diseases
Deep learning-based discovery of tetrahydrocarbazoles as broad-spectrum antitumor agents and click-activated strategy for targeted cancer therapy
DHL-11, a novel prieurianin-type limonoid isolated from Munronia henryi, targeting IMPDH2 to inhibit triple-negative breast cancer
Discovery of SARS-CoV-2 PLpro inhibitors and RIPK1 inhibitors with synergistic antiviral efficacy in a mouse COVID-19 model
Neg-entropy is the true drug target for chronic diseases
Oxygen-boosted dual-section microneedle patch for enhanced drug penetration and improved photodynamic and anti-inflammatory therapy in psoriasis
Early TB treatment reduced deaths from sepsis among people with HIV
Palmitoylation of Tfr1 enhances platelet ferroptosis and liver injury in heat stroke
Structure-guided design of picomolar-level macrocyclic TRPC5 channel inhibitors with antidepressant activity
Therapeutic drug monitoring of biologics in inflammatory bowel disease: An evidence-based multidisciplinary guidelines
New global review reveals integrating finance, technology, and governance is key to equitable climate action
New study reveals cyanobacteria may help spread antibiotic resistance in estuarine ecosystems
Around the world, children’s cooperative behaviors and norms converge toward community-specific norms in middle childhood, Boston College researchers report
How cultural norms shape childhood development
University of Phoenix research finds AI-integrated coursework strengthens student learning and career skills
Next generation genetics technology developed to counter the rise of antibiotic resistance
[Press-News.org] Unsafe at any levelVery low blood alcohol content associated with causing car crashes