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Journal Article

Citation

Xuan Z, Blanchette JG, Nelson TF, Heeren TC, Nguyen TH, Naimi TS. Int. J. Alcohol Drug Res. 2015; 4(2): 119-130.

Affiliation

Department of Community Health Sciences, Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, MA; Section of General Internal Medicine, Boston Medical Center, Boston, MA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Kettil Bruun Society for Epidemiological Research on Alcohol)

DOI

10.7895/ijadr.v4i2.205

PMID

26925185

Abstract

AIMS: To test the hypotheses that stronger policy environments are associated with less impaired driving and that driving-oriented and drinking-oriented policy subgroups are independently associated with impaired driving.

DESIGN: State-level data on 29 policies in 50 states from 2001-2009 were used as lagged exposures in generalized linear regression models to predict self-reported impaired driving. SETTING: Fifty United States and Washington, D.C. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 1,292,245 adults (≥ 18 years old) biennially from 2002-2010. MEASURES: Alcohol Policy Scale scores representing the alcohol policy environment were created by summing policies weighted by their efficacy and degree of implementation by state-year. Past-30-day alcohol-impaired driving from 2002-2010 was obtained from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System surveys.

FINDINGS: Higher Alcohol Policy Scale scores are strongly associated with lower state-level prevalence and individual-level risk of impaired driving. After accounting for driving-oriented policies, drinking-oriented policies had a robust independent association with reduced likelihood of impaired driving. Reduced binge drinking mediates the relationship between drinking-oriented policies and impaired driving, and driving-oriented policies reduce the likelihood of impaired driving among binge drinkers.

CONCLUSIONS: Efforts to reduce alcohol-impaired driving should focus on reducing excessive drinking in addition to preventing driving among those who are impaired.


Language: en

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