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Quarterly Table Reporting Alcohol Involvement in Fatal
Motor-Vehicle Crashes
The following table reports alcohol involvement in fatal
motor-vehicle crashes in the United States for July-September 1992.
This table, published quarterly in MMWR, focuses attention on the
impact of alcohol use on highway safety. Table_1
A fatal crash is considered alcohol-related by the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) if either a driver or
nonoccupant (e.g., pedestrian) had a blood alcohol concentration
(BAC) of greater than or equal to 0.01% (greater than or equal to
0.01g/dL) in a police-reported traffic crash. Those with a BAC
greater than or equal to 0.10% (greater than or equal to 0.10 g/dL;
the legal level of intoxication in most states) are considered
intoxicated. Because BACs are not available for all persons in
fatal crashes, NHTSA estimates the number of alcohol-related
traffic fatalities based on a discriminant analysis of information
from all cases for which driver or nonoccupant BAC data are
available. There may be seasonal trends associated with these data.
Table_1 Note:
To print large tables and graphs users may have to change their printer settings to landscape and use a small font size.
Estimated number and percentage of total traffic fatalities * and drivers involved in
fatal crashes, by age and blood alcohol concentration (BAC) level -- United States,
July-September 1992
=============================================================================================
Fatalities, by BAC +
-----------------------------------------------------------
BAC=0.00 0.01%<=bac<=0.09% BAC>=0.10%
Age No. ---------------- ----------------- ----------------
group (yrs) fatalities & No. (%) No. (%) No. (%)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0-14 840 650 (77.4) 62 ( 7.3) 128 (15.2)
15-20 1,658 964 (58.1) 196 (11.8) 498 (30.1)
21-24 1,219 464 (38.1) 147 (12.0) 608 (49.9)
25-34 2,242 827 (36.9) 238 (10.6) 1,178 (52.5)
35-64 3,088 1,654 (53.6) 265 ( 8.6) 1,169 (37.9)
>=65 1,575 1,316 (83.6) 90 ( 5.7) 169 (10.7)
Total 10,622 5,875 (55.3) 997 ( 9.4) 3,750 (35.3)
Drivers, @ by BAC **
------------------------------------------------------------
BAC=0.00 0.01%<=bac<=0.09% BAC>=0.10%
Age No. ---------------- ----------------- -----------------
group (yrs) drivers & No. (%) No. (%) No. (%)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0-14 ++ 45 42 (93.9) 2 ( 4.9) 1 ( 1.2)
15-20 2,069 1,521 (73.5) 179 ( 8.7) 369 (17.8)
21-24 1,716 998 (58.2) 186 (10.9) 532 (31.0)
25-34 3,563 2,205 (61.9) 275 ( 7.7) 1,083 (30.4)
35-64 4,781 3,615 (75.6) 264 ( 5.5) 902 (18.9)
>=65 1,403 1,294 (92.2) 40 ( 2.8) 70 ( 5.0)
Total 13,577 9,675 (71.3) 946 ( 7.0) 2,956 (21.8)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Fatalities include all occupants and nonoccupants who died within 30 days of a
motor-vehicle crash on a public roadway.
+ BAC distributions are estimates for drivers and nonoccupants involved in fatal crashes.
Numbers of fatalities are rounded to the nearest whole number.
& Includes only those for whom age is known.
@ Driver may or may not have been killed.
** BAC distributions are estimates for drivers involved in fatal crashes. Numbers of drivers
are rounded to the nearest whole number.
++ Although usually too young to drive legally, persons in this age group are included for
completeness of the data set.
=============================================================================================
Source: Fatal Accident Reporting System, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
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