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Journal Article

Citation

Soderstrom CA, Dischinger PC, Kerns TJ. Proc. Assoc. Adv. Automot. Med. Annu. Conf. 1993; 37: 271-278.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1993, Association for the Advancement of Automotive Medicine)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Crash report and blood alcohol concentration (BAC) data were linked for 109 injured driver/passenger pairs admitted to a Level I trauma center. Among those occupants, 47 drivers (43%) (mean BAC, 147 mg/dl) and 45 passengers (41 %) (mean BAC, 127 mg/dl) were BAC+. No occupant was BAC+ in 57 crashes (52%); both were BAC+ in 40 (37%); and only one was BAC + in 12 (11 %). When both occupants were BAC +, the driver had the higher BAC in 68 % of cases, and when one was BAC +, it was the driver 58 % of the time. In 6 additional alcohol-related crashes with one driver and two passengers, the "wrong" occupant was driving on 5 occasions. Hence, in the 58 crashes involving BAC+ occupants, the least appropriate occupant was driving 67% of the time.

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