Literature DB >> 15276921

Preventing alcohol-related traffic injury: a health promotion approach.

Peter Howat1, David Sleet, Randy Elder, Bruce Maycock.   

Abstract

The conditions that give rise to drinking and driving are complex, with multiple and interrelated causes. Prevention efforts benefit from an approach that relies on the combination of multiple interventions. Health promotion provides a useful framework for conceptualizing and implementing actions to reduce drinking and driving since it involves a combination of educational, behavioral, environmental, and policy approaches. This review draws on data from a range of settings to characterize the effectiveness of various interventions embedded within the health promotion approach. Interventions considered part of the health promotion approach include: (1) economic interventions (2) organizational interventions, (3) policy interventions, and (4) health education interventions, including the use of media, school and community education, and public awareness programs. Effective health promotion strengthens the skills and capabilities of individuals to take action and the capacity of groups or communities to act collectively to exert control over the determinants of alcohol-impaired driving. There is strong evidence for the effectiveness of some components of health promotion, including economic and retailer interventions, alcohol taxation, reducing alcohol availability, legal and legislative strategies, and strategies addressing the servers of alcohol. There is also evidence for the effectiveness of sobriety checkpoints, lower BAC laws, minimum legal drinking age laws, and supportive media promotion programs. Other interventions with moderate evidence of effectiveness include restricting alcohol advertising and promotion, and actions involving counter advertising. Health education interventions alone that have insufficient evidence for effectiveness include passive server training programs, school drug and alcohol education programs, community mobilization efforts, and health warnings. Because each intervention builds on the strengths of every other one, ecological approaches to reducing alcohol-impaired driving using all four components of the health promotion model are likely to be the most effective. Settings such as schools, workplaces, cities, and communities offer practical opportunities to implement alcohol-impaired driving prevention programs within this framework.

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Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 15276921     DOI: 10.1080/15389580490465238

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Traffic Inj Prev        ISSN: 1538-9588            Impact factor:   1.491


  14 in total

1.  Impaired-driving prevalence among US high school students: associations with substance use and risky driving behaviors.

Authors:  Kaigang Li; Bruce G Simons-Morton; Ralph Hingson
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2013-09-12       Impact factor: 9.308

Review 2.  A developmental perspective on alcohol and youths 16 to 20 years of age.

Authors:  Sandra A Brown; Matthew McGue; Jennifer Maggs; John Schulenberg; Ralph Hingson; Scott Swartzwelder; Christopher Martin; Tammy Chung; Susan F Tapert; Kenneth Sher; Ken C Winters; Cherry Lowman; Stacia Murphy
Journal:  Pediatrics       Date:  2008-04       Impact factor: 7.124

3.  Cohabitation, gender, and alcohol consumption in 19 countries: a multilevel analysis.

Authors:  Qing Li; Richard Wilsnack; Sharon Wilsnack; Arlinda Kristjanson
Journal:  Subst Use Misuse       Date:  2010-04-16       Impact factor: 2.164

4.  Women's receptivity to Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders prevention approaches: A case study of two regions in Russia.

Authors:  Tatiana Balachova; Barbara Bonner; David Bard; Mark Chaffin; Galina Isurina; Arthur Owora; Larissa Tsvetkova; Elena Volkova
Journal:  Int J Alcohol Drug Res       Date:  2014

5.  Characteristics of older at-risk drinkers who drive after drinking and those who do not drive after drinking.

Authors:  Maija B Sanna; Alia T Tuqan; Jeff S Goldsmith; Malena S Law; Karina D Ramirez; Diana H Liao; Alison A Moore
Journal:  Traffic Inj Prev       Date:  2015       Impact factor: 1.491

6.  Undergraduate student drinking and related harms at an Australian university: web-based survey of a large random sample.

Authors:  Jonathan Hallett; Peter M Howat; Bruce R Maycock; Alexandra McManus; Kypros Kypri; Satvinder S Dhaliwal
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2012-01-16       Impact factor: 3.295

Review 7.  Reducing the environmental impact of dietary choice: perspectives from a behavioural and social change approach.

Authors:  Andrew Joyce; Sarah Dixon; Jude Comfort; Jonathan Hallett
Journal:  J Environ Public Health       Date:  2012-06-17

8.  The cow in the room: public knowledge of the links between dietary choices and health and environmental impacts.

Authors:  Andrew W Joyce; Sarah Dixon; Jude Comfort; Jonathan Hallett
Journal:  Environ Health Insights       Date:  2008-09-15

9.  Effect of an injury awareness education program on risk-taking behaviors and injuries in juvenile justice offenders: a retrospective cohort study.

Authors:  Kwok M Ho; Edward Litton; Elizabeth Geelhoed; Monica Gope; Maxine Burrell; Jacqueline Coribel; Angela McDowall; Sudhakar Rao
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-02-15       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  An injury awareness education program on outcomes of juvenile justice offenders in Western Australia: an economic analysis.

Authors:  Kwok M Ho; Elizabeth Geelhoed; Monica Gope; Maxine Burrell; Sudhakar Rao
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2012-08-28       Impact factor: 2.655

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