
@article{ref1,
title="A comparison of alcohol involvement in pedestrians and pedestrian casualties",
journal="Proceedings: American Association for Automotive Medicine Annual Conference",
year="1979",
author="Blomberg, Richard D. and Fell, James C.",
volume="23",
number="",
pages="1-17",
abstract="A field accident study was conducted in the City of New Orleans in 1975-76 in order to (1) determine the percentage and relative risk of alcohol involvement in adult pedestrian fatal and injury accidents; (2) identify in the alcohol involved accidents any unique accident types, behavioral errors, or other characteristics which distinguish these accidents from non-alcohol pedestrian accidents; and (3) study the alcohol use patterns and the drinker classifications of these pedestrians.  The study was based on extensive data collection on adult (age ≥ 14) pedestrian fatal and non-fatal accident cases and the establishment of control groups based on accident and random site sampling. Specifically, the following groups were developed: Fatal Accident Group (N = 86) - all pedestrians (ages ≥ 14) who died within 24 hours of a motor vehicle accident in New Orleans during 1972-76. Injury (non-fatal) Accident Group (N = 180) - pedestrians (ages ≥ 14) taken to Charity Hospital in New Orleans following an accident that occurred between March 1975 and March 1976. Accident Site Control Groups (N =1208) - similarly exposed but non-accident involved pedestrians (ages ≥ 14) passing the site of the fatal and injury accidents within ± 30 minutes on the same day of the week as the original accidents.<p />",
language="",
issn="0892-6484",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}