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Study: Mandatory Alcohol Testing Cuts Risk of Alcohol Involvement in Fatal Crashes
A study by scientists at Columbia University found that mandatory
alcohol testing programs for commercial truck drivers may have
contributed to a significant reduction in alcohol involvement in fatal
motor carrier crashes.
The study, "Effectiveness of mandatory alcohol testing programs in
reducing alcohol involvement in fatal motor carrier crashes," was
published in the American Journal of Epidemiology.
"Mandatory alcohol testing programs for motor carrier drivers were
implemented in the United States in 1995 and have not been adequately
evaluated," wrote J.E. Brady and colleagues.
Using data from the federal government's Fatality Analysis Reporting
System during 1982-2006, they assessed the effectiveness of mandatory
alcohol testing programs in reducing alcohol involvement in fatal truck
crashes.
The study sample consisted of 69,295 motor carrier drivers and 83,436
non-motor-carrier drivers who were involved in 66,138 fatal multivehicle
crashes. Overall, 2.7 percent of the motor carrier drivers and 19.4
percent of the non-motor-carrier drivers had positive blood alcohol
concentrations.
With adjustment for driver age, sex, history of driving while
intoxicated, and survival status, implementation of the mandatory
alcohol testing programs was found to be associated with a 23 percent
reduced risk of alcohol involvement in fatal crashes by truck drivers.
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