Authors
Kara E MacLeod, Katherine J Karriker-Jaffe, David R Ragland, William A Satariano, Tara Kelley-Baker, John H Lacey
Publication date
2015/8/1
Source
Accident Analysis & Prevention
Volume
81
Pages
134-142
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
Background
Alcohol-impaired driving accounts for substantial proportion of traffic-related fatalities in the U.S. Risk perceptions for drinking and driving have been associated with various measures of drinking and driving behavior. In an effort to understand how to intervene and to better understand how risk perceptions may be shaped, this study explored whether an objective environmental-level measure (proportion of alcohol-involved driving crashes in one’s residential city) were related to individual-level perceptions and behavior.
Methods
Using data from a 2012 cross-sectional roadside survey of 1147 weekend nighttime drivers in California, individual-level self-reported acceptance of drinking and driving and past-year drinking and driving were merged with traffic crash data using respondent ZIP codes. Population average logistic regression modeling was conducted for the odds of acceptance of drinking and …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
KE MacLeod, KJ Karriker-Jaffe, DR Ragland… - Accident Analysis & Prevention, 2015