Safe Riding, Safe Driving

Special Feature

Keeping Your Family Safe During the Holidays

Motor vehicle crashes are the number one killer of youth ages 15 to 20.1

If you’re the parent of a teen, it’s likely that drunk and drugged driving is at the top of your list of concerns for your child. Many teens know someone who has been involved in or affected by a car crash with an impaired driver—a driver who had been drinking alcohol or using another drug that lowers the ability to drive safely. Sadly, some of those drivers are young people.

Sobering Statistics2
  • Per mile driven, 16-year-old drivers have the highest rate of fatal crash involvement.
  • In 2000, 2,339 youth died in alcohol-related crashes—accounting for more than one-third of all youth traffic deaths. Think of it this way—that’s enough kids to fill more than 58 schoolbuses.
  • More than 60 percent of youth alcohol-related crash deaths occurred in rural areas—on roads where traffic isn’t heavy.

The Good News

During the past 20 years, educational efforts, policy change, and new laws have helped reduce the number of youth alcohol-related deaths. The number of young people who died in a crash involving a young driver with a blood alcohol content at or above .10 has declined by more than 60 percent since 1982—from 2,763 to 1,076 deaths.3
However, this news doesn’t mean that the work is done—just ask a parent who lost his teen to a car crash.
Reducing alcohol-related traffic deaths is one of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s top concerns. The national goal is to lower the death toll for all ages to no more than 11,000 annually by the year 2005.4 This number may seem high, but not when you compare it to the 16,000 people who were killed in 2000 as a result of alcohol-related crashes.

What To Do

December is National Drunk and Drugged Driving Prevention Month, a time when communities across the country join with the National 3D Prevention Month Coalition to conduct campaigns to prevent driving under the influence of drugs and alcohol. The tips below can help you stop impaired driving in your neighborhood and keep your child safe.

Sources

Additional Resources

Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration’s National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug Information, 2002. Alcohol and Driving: A Dangerous Holiday Cocktail, last referenced 11/24/04. (A print version of this publication was released in 2002.)

Mothers Against Drunk Driving, last referenced 11/24/04.

National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, last referenced 11/24/04.

National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Injury Prevention: Impaired Driving, last referenced 11/24/04.

National Organizations for Youth Safety, last referenced 11/24/04.

Students Against Destructive Decisions, last referenced 11/24/04.