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Journal Article

Citation

Zivković V, Nikolic S, Lukić V, Zivadinović N, Babic D. Accid. Anal. Prev. 2013; 53: 161-165.

Affiliation

Institute of Forensic Medicine, University of Belgrade-School of Medicine, Serbia. Electronic address: vladimir.zivkovic@mfub.bg.ac.rs.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.aap.2013.01.012

PMID

23434844

Abstract

The aim of the study presented here has been to see what the effects of the new traffic safety law are, 2 years into its initial implementation, on driving under the influence of alcohol. Until the end of 2009, the legal limit for blood concentration for drivers in Serbia was 0.5g/l; however, the new traffic safety law stipulates the new limit to be 0.3g/l. A retrospective autopsy study was performed over a 6-year period (from 2006 to 2011) whose sample covered cases of fatally injured drivers who had died at the scene of the incident, before being admitted to hospital. A total of 161 fatally injured drivers were examined for their blood alcohol concentration. The average age for these drivers was 40.2±15.4 years, with a significant male predominance of 152 men to 9 women (χ(2)=152.000, p<0.001). This study has shown no decrease in the ratio of drivers under the influence of alcohol vs. all drivers (Pearson χ(2)=4.415, df=5, p=0.491), nor in the number of drivers under the influence of alcohol (Pearson χ(2)=6.629, df=5, p=0.250), nor a decrease in the mean blood alcohol concentration in drivers (1.72±0.87 vs. 1.68±0.95g/l, t=0.177, df=80, p=0.860). The conclusion of this study is that the new law has had a limited effect on driving under the influence of alcohol, which still remains one of the major human factors, responsible for road-traffic crashes in Serbia.


Language: en

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