1 / 22

Understanding Alcohol Driver Education

Understanding Alcohol Driver Education Alcohol Use Patterns No Teen Data Average number of servings per month by age Abstainers Infrequent drinkers Light drinkers - Do not drink or drink less often than once a year

Roberta
Download Presentation

Understanding Alcohol Driver Education

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. Understanding Alcohol Driver Education

  2. Alcohol Use Patterns No Teen Data Average number of servings per month by age

  3. Abstainers Infrequent drinkers Light drinkers - Do not drink or drink less often than once a year - Drink once a month at most and drink small amounts per typical drinking occasion - Drink once a month at most and drink medium amounts per typical drinking occasion, or drink no more than three to four times a month Criteria for Drinking Classifications

  4. Moderate drinkers Moderate/heavy drinkers Heavy drinkers - Drink at least once a week and medium amounts per typical drinking occasion - Drink at least once a week and medium amounts per typical drinking occasion or three to four times a month and large amounts per typical drinking occasion - Drink at least once a week and large amounts per typical drinking occasion Criteria for Drinking Classifications

  5. Alcohol Use Patterns Moderate drinking redefined (NIAAA) • No more than two drinks each day for most men and one drink each day for women Binge drinking • Refers to the consumption of five drinks in a row, at least once during the previous two-week period

  6. Alcohol Use Patterns • Individuals who should NOT consume Alcohol: • Drivers • Pregnant women • Recovering Alcoholics • Medical Conditions or Taking Medication • Under 21 years of age

  7. What does alcohol do? • Judgment • Inhibition • Coordination • Depth perception • Reaction/movement time

  8. Nature of Alcoholic Beverages Ethanol Alcohol or Ethanol Fermentation • A chemical process whereby plant products are converted into alcohol by the action of yeast cells on carbohydrate materials Proof • A number that is twice the percentage of alcohol by volume in a beverage (ex) 100 proof = 50% pure alcohol

  9. Nature of Alcoholic Beverages • Nutritional Value • Calories • Simple Carbohydrates • No vitamins, minerals, fat or protein • 7 calories per gram • Proof= twice the %alcohol (100 proof is 50% alcohol)

  10. A Drink is a Drink is a Drink • Beer: 12 oz * 5% alcohol = 0.60 oz • Wine: 5 oz * 12% alcohol = 0.60 oz • Gin: 1.25 oz * 50% alcohol = 0.625 0z • Others: read the label and do the math.

  11. Concentrations • Wine Coolers: 12 oz * (4 to 10 %) = 0.48 to 1.2 oz. Can be two drinks. • Others: average 7%

  12. Factors that influence the Absorption of Alcohol • Strength of the beverage • Number of drinks consumed • Speed of consumption • Presence of food • Body Mass/ Lean Tissue • Body chemistry

  13. Party Guidelines • Beverage vs. drug • Know what you are drinking/Mix your own. • One drink per hour • Water or soft drink between • Solid food with the drinks • Drinking is no game, don’t play!

  14. Blood Alcohol Concentration BAC • The percentage of alcohol in a measured quantity of blood; BAC can be determined directly through the analysis of a blood sample or indirectly, through the analysis of exhaled air Acute alcohol intoxication • A potentially fatal elevation of the BAC, often resulting from heavy, rapid consumption of alcohol Sobering up – Oxidation (Liver) over Time

  15. Alcohol-Related Health Problems • Accidents – 17 States Legal BAC = 0.08% • Other States Legal BAC = 0.10% • Social problems • Fetal alcohol syndrome and fetal alcohol effects (Placenta) • Crime and violence • Suicide

  16. Hosting a Party Responsibly • Provide other social activities as a primary focus when alcohol is served • Respect an individual’s decision about alcohol if that decision is either to abstain or to drink responsibly • Recognize the decision not to drink and the respect it warrants by providing equally attractive and accessible nonalcoholic drinks when alcohol is served

  17. Hosting a Party Responsibly • Recognize that drunkenness is neither healthy nor safe— one should not excuse otherwise unacceptable behavior solely because the individual had “too much to drink” • Provide food when alcohol is served • Serve diluted drinks, and do not urge that glasses be constantly full • Keep the cocktail hour before dinner to a reasonable time and consumption limit

  18. Hosting a Party Responsibly • Recognize your responsibility for the health, safety, and pleasure of both the drinker and the nondrinker by avoiding intoxication and by helping others do the same • Make contingency plans for intoxication • Serve or use alcohol only in environments conducive to pleasant and relaxing behavior

  19. Organizations That SupportResponsible Drinking • Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD) • Students Against Destructive Decisions (SADD) • Boost Alcohol Consciousness Concerning the Health of University Students (BACCHUS) • Greeks Advocating Mature Management of Alcohol (GAMMA)

  20. Problem Drinking and Alcoholism • Problem drinking • Alcoholism • Codependence • Denial and enabling • Alcoholism and the family • Helping the alcoholic: Rehabilitation and recovery

  21. Current Alcohol Concerns • Adult children of alcoholic parents • Women and alcohol • Alcohol advertising

  22. Summary Questions?

More Related