Government Study Shows National Drunk Driving Trends

April 24, 2008

Wisconsin drivers apparently aren’t heeding the message of one of America’s biggest brewers, located in their own backyard. Nor are residents in some neighboring states.

Miller Brewing Co. urges people to “Respect the Road.”

Wisconsin has the worst drunken driving rate in the country at 26 percent, according to a government report that says 15 percent of adult drivers nationally report driving under the influence of alcohol in the previous year.

Rounding out the worst five are North Dakota, Minnesota, Nebraska and South Dakota. Michigan’s rate was 18 percent.

In Wisconsin, the federal government estimates more than a quarter of the state’s adult drivers had driven under the influence in the previous year. Rounding out the worst five are North Dakota, Minnesota, Nebraska and South Dakota.

Utah had the lowest incidence of drunken driving at 9.5 percent. It was the only state where fewer than 10 percent of adult motorists reported driving under the influence. Following closely behind were a slew of Southern states that often fare poorly when it comes to government health statistics. This time, however, they’re serving as models. West Virginia, Arkansas, Kentucky and North Carolina all had drunken driving rates for the prior year of less than 11 percent.

The report on drunken driving relies on data obtained from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health. The survey, based on a scientific random sample of households, asked 127,283 adults in 2004, 2005 and 2006 whether they had driven under the influence in the past year. Health experts say the state-by-state breakdowns support other surveys showing that residents in northern states are more likely to engage in heavy alcohol consumption.

“It’s not surprising, but it means that these jurisdictions should take this data and think about how they approach public education campaigns and enforcement campaigns,” said Dr. H. Westley Clark of the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, which released the report. The agency is a part of the Department of Health and Human Services.

Eric Goplerud, research professor at George Washington University Medical Center, said cultural and demographic issues probably have a role in the higher rates of driving under the influence in certain states. He said that religious affiliations in the Southeast often strongly discourage drinking, but that doesn’t occur so much in the upper Midwest.

“A good part of the social life is around drinking,” said Goplerud, who is also director of Ensuring Solutions to Alcohol Problems, which call for increased access to treatment programs.

Also, blacks drink at substantially lower rates and at less hazardous rates than whites, he said. The populations in those upper Midwest states are heavily white.

Jeffrey Ratliff-Crain, associate professor of psychology at the University of Minnesota-Morris, noted that the Minnesota Legislature is considering a bill that would let bars stay open until 4 a.m. during the Republican National Convention, pouring more money into the economy.

“We’re making it easier to drink to all hours of the night, but (drinking and driving) didn’t come into the discussion,” Ratliff-Crain said. “There is a seeming acceptance that this is the way it is. Of course people are going to be drinking and driving, and well, that’s it.”

Clark said states with the lowest rates for driving under the influence shouldn’t take comfort in the data.

“Even in Utah, which reported the nation’s lowest rate, nearly one in 10 drivers report driving under the influence of alcohol within the past year,” Clark said. “So, even in states that have low consumption rates or low DUI rates, they too need to reflect on the approach they’re taking. We don’t want people to lull themselves into a false sense of security.”

A majority of Utah residents are Mormon. The religion bars the use of alcohol.

It’s illegal to drive with a blood alcohol level of 0.08 percent or higher.

In the past decade, the number of impaired drivers involved in alcohol-related crashes has remained relatively stable — from 12,348 in 1996 to 12,491 in 2006. Those figures from the Department of Transportation cover drivers with a blood-alcohol level of 0.08 percent or higher.

The federal government also released estimates of driving under the influence of illicit drugs. The rates were highest in the District of Columbia, 7 percent; Rhode Island, 6.8 percent; and Massachusetts, 6.4 percent.

The states with the lowest rates for driving under the influence of illicit drugs within the past year were New Jersey, 3.2 percent; Alabama, 3.4 percent; and North Dakota and South Dakota, 3.5 percent.

The report.