1 / 17

Hawaii Strategic Highway Safety Plan: IMPAIRED DRIVING

Hawaii Strategic Highway Safety Plan: IMPAIRED DRIVING. Dan Galanis Injury Prevention and Control Program Hawaii Department of Health 1250 Punchbowl St., Room 214 Honolulu, HI 96813 Ph: 586-5943 E-mail: daniel.galanis@doh.hawaii.gov. Overview of presentation.

octavia
Download Presentation

Hawaii Strategic Highway Safety Plan: IMPAIRED DRIVING

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hawaii Strategic Highway Safety Plan:IMPAIRED DRIVING Dan Galanis Injury Prevention and Control Program Hawaii Department of Health 1250 Punchbowl St., Room 214 Honolulu, HI 96813 Ph: 586-5943 E-mail: daniel.galanis@doh.hawaii.gov

  2. Overview of presentation • Fatal traffic crashes (FARS data) • Definitions • Overall prevalence • Trends, county comparisons • Other factors • Time, day of week, driver age • Driver profiles • Non-fatal traffic crashes (MVAR/DOT crash data) • Definitions • Overall prevalence • Trends, county comparisons • Other factors • Driver profiles

  3. Fatal crashes • Fatal crash/FARS data • Traffic only, i.e. crashes on public roads • Excludes crashes in parking lots, driveways, military facilities, gated sub-divisions, etc. • Unintentional in nature • Excludes suicides (1 crash), deaths of undetermined intent (7 crashes, 1% of total) • Excludes 37 crashes (6%) that did not involve a Hawaii resident fatality • Alcohol-related • BAC > 0.01% for any driver involved in the fatal crash, or refused test • Most (82%) alcohol-related crashes had at least one driver 0.08% or more • Alcohol related ~~ intoxicated • Drug-related • Positive results for any driver involved in the fatal crash • Positive for narcotic, depressant, stimulant, THC, or hallucinogen • THC (13%) • Stimulants (10%) • methamphetamine (7%), amphetamine (5%)

  4. Fatal traffic crashes in Hawaii, 2001-2005: Proportion related to substance use by drivers

  5. Fatal traffic crashes in Hawaii, 2001-2005: Trends in the proportion of alcohol-related driving

  6. Fatal traffic crashes in Hawaii, 2001-2005: Trends in the proportion of drug-related driving

  7. Fatal traffic crashes in Hawaii, 2001-2005: Trends in the proportion of alcohol and/or drug-related driving

  8. Fatal traffic crashes in Hawaii, 2001-2005: Alcohol-related crashes by time of day and day of week

  9. Fatal traffic crashes in Hawaii, 2001-2005: Alcohol and drug use among drivers, by age group

  10. Impaired driving in Hawaii, 2001-2005 • Total impact • 46 residents killed by alcohol-positive drivers each year • 26 residents killed by drug-positive drivers each year • 60 residents killed by alcohol/drug-positive drivers each year • Crashes involving alcohol/drug-positive drivers are the 4th leading cause of death for 16 to 40 year-old residents • 11% of the total of 1,719 • Cancer is 1st (14%), suicide 2nd (13%), heart disease 3rd (12%) • Crashes involving alcohol/drug-positive drivers are the 4th leading cause of fatal injuries for all ages • 10% of the total of 2,915

  11. Characteristics of drivers involved in fatal crashes in Hawaii, by category of substance use, 2001-2005 *statistically significant difference between alcohol/drug positive drivers and substance negative drivers

  12. Non-fatal crashes • Motor vehicle accident report (MVAR) • Criteria • Any crash resulting in injury, or >$3000 cumulative property damage • Traffic only, i.e. crashes on public roads • Excludes crashes in parking lots, driveways, military facilities, gated sub-divisions, etc. • Includes residents and non-residents, intentional and unintentional • Alcohol-related • Search of “Citation” field for “DUI”, “291-4”, “291-E”, “286-242”, etc. • Value for “alcohol” in “Human factors” field • Drug-related • Search of “Citation” field for “drugs”, “291-7”, “2917” • Value for “drugs” in “Human factors” field

  13. Non-fatal traffic crashes in Hawaii, 2001-2005: Proportion related to substance use by drivers, by county

  14. Non-fatal traffic crashes in Hawaii, 2001-2005: Trends in the proportion of alcohol-related driving *denotes statistically significant trend over 5-year period

  15. Non-fatal traffic crashes in Hawaii, 2001-2005: Rates of alcohol use among drivers, by age group(Note difference in scale: /100,000 licensees for fatal crashes, /10,000 licensees for non-fatals)

  16. Characteristics of drivers involved in non-fatal crashes in Hawaii, by category of alcohol use, 2001-2005 *statistically significant difference between alcohol/drug positive drivers and substance negative drivers

  17. Data summary for impaired driving • How much? • *36% fatal crashes alcohol-related, 46% impaired *6%-7% of non-fatal crashes alcohol-related/impaired • Who? *Younger drivers (18-24 years) *Male drivers more likely to use alcohol/be impaired • Where? *Generally more prevalent in Neighbor Island crashes *Increasing trends for Hawaii and Maui counties • When? *Nighttime crashes (8pm-5am): 52% *Weekend crashes (Sat/Sun): 46%

More Related