a Department of Health Sciences and Kinesiology, Waters College of Health Professions, Georgia Southern University , Savannah , Georgia.
b Department of Health Policy and Community Health, Jiann-Ping Hsu College of Public Health, Georgia Southern University , Statesboro , Georgia.
Traffic Inj Prev. 2019;20(6):557-562. doi: 10.1080/15389588.2019.1622006. Epub 2019 Jun 21.
U.S. pedestrian fatalities increased by 25% between 2010 and 2015. Risk factors include distractions, the built environment, urbanization, economic variables, and weather conditions. Of interest is the role of alcohol and drugs in premature death among pedestrians. This study sought to explore the prevalence of substance use screenings among pedestrian fatalities in the United States between 2014 and 2016. Data were collected from the Fatality Analysis Reporting System provided by the NHTSA. Pedestrian crash variables included demographics as well as information regarding alcohol or drug testing status. Frequency and cross-tabulation tables were constructed to assess the prevalence of screening by person, place, and time. Log-linear analyses were completed to explore age, race, and sex differences. A 3-year examination period was used to control for yearly fluctuations and to incorporate an increasing trend in cases. Pedestrian fatalities accounted for 84% of all deaths among vulnerable road users during the examination period. Those most at risk were white males between the ages of 45 and 64. Over all states, 74.7% of fatalities were tested for alcohol and 67.1% were tested for drugs; further, 66.5% of cases were tested for both alcohol and drugs and 24.8% were tested for neither substance. Cases screened for both alcohol and drugs ranged from 2.9% in North Carolina to 95.7% in Nevada and those testing for neither substance ranged from a high of 68.9% in Indiana to a low of 1.1% in Maryland. Log-linear regression revealed significant differences in alcohol screening by age and race but not by sex. Differences in drug screening were not identified for any demographic variable. Fatalities tested for alcohol were significantly more likely to be tested for drugs; only 8.2% were screened solely for alcohol and 0.05% were screened for drugs alone. Preventive strategies become more important as pedestrian crashes and fatalities increase. Risk reduction in the form of policy change, alterations to the built environment, or interdisciplinary approaches to injury prevention is dependent upon best evidence supported in part by more deliberate and consistent screening.
2010 年至 2015 年,美国行人死亡人数增加了 25%。风险因素包括分心、建筑环境、城市化、经济变量和天气条件。人们感兴趣的是酒精和毒品在行人过早死亡中的作用。本研究旨在探讨 2014 年至 2016 年期间美国行人死亡事件中药物使用筛查的流行情况。数据来自 NHTSA 提供的伤亡分析报告系统。行人碰撞变量包括人口统计数据以及关于酒精或药物检测状态的信息。构建了频率和交叉表,以评估人员、地点和时间的筛查流行率。完成对数线性分析以探索年龄、种族和性别差异。使用 3 年的检查期来控制每年的波动并纳入病例的上升趋势。行人死亡人数占检查期间弱势道路使用者所有死亡人数的 84%。风险最高的是 45 至 64 岁之间的白人男性。在所有州,74.7%的死亡案例接受了酒精检测,67.1%接受了毒品检测;此外,66.5%的病例同时接受了酒精和毒品检测,24.8%的病例既未接受酒精检测也未接受毒品检测。同时接受酒精和毒品检测的案例范围从北卡罗来纳州的 2.9%到内华达州的 95.7%,而既未接受任何一种物质检测的案例范围从印第安纳州的 68.9%到马里兰州的 1.1%。对数线性回归显示,酒精筛查在年龄和种族方面存在显著差异,但在性别方面没有差异。在任何人口统计学变量方面,毒品筛查都没有差异。接受酒精检测的死亡案例更有可能接受毒品检测;只有 8.2%的案例仅接受酒精检测,0.05%的案例仅接受毒品检测。随着行人碰撞和死亡人数的增加,预防策略变得更加重要。以政策改变、建筑环境改变或跨学科方法预防伤害的形式降低风险,取决于部分基于更精心和一致的筛查的最佳证据。