Literature DB >> 28056493

Alcohol-Impaired Driving and Perceived Risks of Legal Consequences.

Frank A Sloan1, Sabrina A McCutchan1, Lindsey M Eldred1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Driving while impaired (DWI) is a threat to public health. Codified legal sanctions are a widely implemented strategy to reduce DWI. However, it is unclear that sanctioning affects individual risk perceptions so as to deter alcohol-impaired driving.
METHODS: Using survey data collected from individual drivers, police, and defense attorneys specializing in DWI in 8 U.S. cities, we investigated whether risk perceptions about legal consequences for alcohol-impaired driving, both the risk of being stopped if driving while alcohol-impaired and receiving specific penalties following a DWI, deter alcohol-impaired driving. First, we analyzed how different drivers' risk perceptions about being pulled over and facing criminal sanctions related to their self-reported alcohol-impaired driving in the year following the interview at which risk perceptions were elicited. Second, using data from an experimental module in which individual's risk perceptions were randomly updated by the interview, we analyzed how each driver's beliefs about his or her own future alcohol-impaired driving responded to randomly generated increases in the apprehension probability and sanction magnitude.
RESULTS: Higher probabilities as estimated by the individuals of being pulled over corresponded to less alcohol-impaired driving in both analyses. Conversely, there was no statistical relationship between perceptions of criminal sanctions for DWI and alcohol-impaired driving with 1 exception-a small significant negative relationship between duration of jail time following a DWI conviction and alcohol-impaired driving.
CONCLUSIONS: Perceptions regarding the threat of being apprehended for alcohol-impaired driving were related to actual self-reported driving, while perceived sanctions following a DWI conviction for DWI generally were unrelated to either actual self-reported alcohol-impaired driving or the person's estimate of probability that he or she would drive while alcohol-impaired in the following year. Increasing certainty of apprehension by increasing police staffing and/or conducting sobriety checks is a more effective strategy for reducing alcohol-impaired driving than legislating increased penalties for DWI.
Copyright © 2017 by the Research Society on Alcoholism.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Deterrence; Driving While Impaired; Police; Risk Perceptions; Sanctions

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28056493      PMCID: PMC5272826          DOI: 10.1111/acer.13298

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Alcohol Clin Exp Res        ISSN: 0145-6008            Impact factor:   3.455


  20 in total

1.  Civil liability, criminal law, and other policies and alcohol-related motor vehicle fatalities in the United States: 1984-1995.

Authors:  K Whetten-Goldstein; F A Sloan; E Stout; L Liang
Journal:  Accid Anal Prev       Date:  2000-11

2.  Effects of drivers' license suspension policies on alcohol-related crash involvement: long-term follow-up in forty-six states.

Authors:  Alexander C Wagenaar; Mildred M Maldonado-Molina
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3.  Boundary-crossing in perceptual deterrence: investigating the linkages between sanction severity, sanction certainty, and offending.

Authors:  Bruce Jacobs; Alex R Piquero
Journal:  Int J Offender Ther Comp Criminol       Date:  2012-05-03

4.  Are People Overoptimistic about the Effects of Heavy Drinking?

Authors:  Frank A Sloan; Lindsey M Eldred; Tong Guo; Yanzhi Xu
Journal:  J Risk Uncertain       Date:  2013-08-01

5.  Association between alcohol-impaired driving enforcement-related strategies and alcohol-impaired driving.

Authors:  Julia R Sanem; Darin J Erickson; Patricia C Rutledge; Kathleen M Lenk; Toben F Nelson; Rhonda Jones-Webb; Traci L Toomey
Journal:  Accid Anal Prev       Date:  2015-03-07

6.  First-time DWI offenders are at risk of recidivating regardless of sanctions imposed.

Authors:  Eileen M Ahlin; Paul L Zador; William J Rauch; Jan M Howard; G Doug Duncan
Journal:  J Crim Justice       Date:  2011-03

7.  Enforcement of alcohol-impaired driving laws in the United States: a national survey of state and local agencies.

Authors:  Darin J Erickson; Kian Farbakhsh; Traci L Toomey; Kathleen M Lenk; Rhonda Jones-Webb; Toben F Nelson
Journal:  Traffic Inj Prev       Date:  2015       Impact factor: 1.491

8.  Effects of prices, civil and criminal sanctions, and law enforcement on alcohol-related mortality.

Authors:  F A Sloan; B A Reilly; C Schenzler
Journal:  J Stud Alcohol       Date:  1994-07

9.  Effects of enforcement intensity on alcohol impaired driving crashes.

Authors:  James C Fell; Geetha Waehrer; Robert B Voas; Amy Auld-Owens; Katie Carr; Karen Pell
Journal:  Accid Anal Prev       Date:  2014-09-18

10.  Driving under the influence of alcohol: frequency, reasons, perceived risk and punishment.

Authors:  Francisco Alonso; Juan C Pastor; Luis Montoro; Cristina Esteban
Journal:  Subst Abuse Treat Prev Policy       Date:  2015-03-12
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  2 in total

1.  Decision strategies while intoxicated relate to alcohol-impaired driving attitudes and intentions.

Authors:  Sara D McMullin; Courtney A Motschman; Laura E Hatz; Denis M McCarthy; Clintin P Davis-Stober
Journal:  Psychol Addict Behav       Date:  2022-01-13

2.  Drug use and driving behaviors among drivers with and without alcohol-related infractions.

Authors:  Juliana N Scherer; Jaqueline B Schuch; Marcelo R Rocha; Vanessa Assunção; Roberta B Silvestrin; Vinícius S Roglio; Renata P Limberger; Tanara R V Sousa; Flavio Pechansky
Journal:  Trends Psychiatry Psychother       Date:  2020 Jul-Sep
  2 in total

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