Alcohol And Traffic Deaths
- Between 1982 and 1993, 266,291 deaths in the United States were alcohol-related -- one fatality every 30 minutes.
- Traffic fatalities in alcohol-related crashes rose by 4 percent from 1994 to 1995. The 17,274 alcohol-related fatalities in 1995 (41 percent of total traffic fatalities for the year) represent a 24 percent reduction from the 22,715 alcohol-related fatalities reported in 1985 (52 percent of the total).
- The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration estimates that alcohol was involved in 41 percent of fatal crashes and in 7 percent of all crashes in 1995.
- The 17,274 fatalities in alcohol-related crashes during 1995 represent an average of one alcohol-related fatality every 30 minutes.
- More than 300,000 people were injured in crashes where police reported that alcohol was present -- an average of one person injured approximately every two minutes.
- Approximately 1.4 million drivers were arrested in 1994 for driving under the influence of alcohol or narcotics. This is an arrest rate of one for every 127 licensed drivers in the United States.
- In 1995, 32 percent of all traffic fatalities occurred in crashes in which at least one driver or non-occupant had a blood-alcohol content of .10 or greater. More than two-thirds of the 13,564 people killed in such crashes were themselves intoxicated. The remaining one-third were passengers, non-intoxicated drivers, or non-intoxicated non-occupants.
- The rate of alcohol involvement in fatal crashes is three and one-third times as high at night as during the day (62.3 percent vs. 18.8 percent). For all crashes, the alcohol involvement rate is nearly five times as high at night (14 percent vs. 3 percent).
- In 1995, 32 percent of all fatal crashes during the week were alcohol-related, compared to 54 percent on weekends. For all crashes, the alcohol involvement rate was 5 percent during the week and 11 percent during the weekend.
- In 1995, 32.5 percent of all fatal traffic accidents involved drivers with a blood-alcohol content of greater than 10.
Related stories:
- Prosecutor: Diana's driver legally drunk - September 1, 1997
- Study: Young brains especially susceptible to alcohol - January 9, 1997
- Drunken driving deaths up after 10-year drop - December 30, 1996
- Effects of alcohol on the brain - October 15, 1995
Related sites:
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- NIAAA - National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism - supports and conducts biomedical and behavioral research on the causes, consequences, treatment, and prevention of alcoholism and alcohol-related problems
- Drinking and Driving Debate - information from the American Beverage Institute on the drinking and driving and BAC debate
- National Commission Against Drunk Driving - a non-profit organization of private and public sector leaders who are dedicated to minimizing the human and economic losses resulting from motor vehicle crashes by working to make driving impaired a socially unacceptable act
God is Against Alcohol, Period!
"I tell you that the curse of God Almighty is on the saloon." -Billy Sunday
Billy Sunday (1862-1935)
Hear Billy Sunday's "Booze Kills!" (MP3)
Hear Billy Sunday on Prohibition (MP3)
The Truth About Booze- part 1 (Pastor Jeff Owens)
The Truth About Booze- part 2 (Pastor Jeff Owens)
The Salvation of a Nation (by Pastor Jack Hyles)
Not Everyone Who
Gets Hit by a Drunk Driver Dies!
"Whiskey and beer are all right in their place, but their place is in hell." -Billy Sunday
"The man who votes for the saloon is pulling on the same rope with the devil, whether he knows it or not." -Billy Sunday
Teens Drink One-Fifth of U.S. Alcohol! | Flying and Alcohol
Beer Soaks America (exposing the lying propaganda of the beer industry)