Impact of an enhanced sobriety checkpoints programme and publicity campaign on motor vehicle collisions, injuries and deaths in Leon, MX: a synthetic control study.

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS
D Alex Quistberg, Carolina Perez-Ferrer, Usama Bilal, Jordan Levi Rodriguez Hernandez, Yenisei Ramírez-Toscano, Luz Mery Cardenas Cardenas, Isabel Junquera-Badilla, Goro Yamada, Tonatiuh Barrientos-Gutierrez, Ana V Diez Roux
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Abstract

Objective: Drunk driving is a major cause of road traffic injuries and deaths in Latin America. We evaluated the impact of a drunk driving intervention in Leon, Mexico on road traffic safety.

Methods: The intervention included increased drunk driving penalties, enhanced sobriety checkpoints and a young adult-focused mass media campaign, beginning 19 December 2018. We created a synthetic control Leon from 12 Mexican municipalities from a pool of 87 based on similarity to Leon using key predictors from 2015 to 2019. We assessed the effect of the intervention on road traffic collisions overall and collisions with injuries, deaths and involving alcohol, using data from police, insurance claims and vital registration.

Results: As compared with the synthetic control, Leon experienced significant postintervention lower police-reported total collision rate (17%) and injury collisions (33%). Alcohol-involved collisions were 38% lower than the synthetic control. Fatal collisions reported by police were 28% lower while vital registration road traffic deaths were 12% lower, though these declines were not statistically significant. We found no impact on insurance collision claims. There was heterogeneity in these changes over the evaluation year, with stronger initial effects and weaker effects by the end of the year.

Conclusions: Drunk driving policies in Leon led to fewer traffic collisions and injuries during the first year of implementation, with a weakening of this effect over time, similar to interventions in high-income settings and other Latin American countries. Supporting the expansion of similar policies to other cities in the region could improve road safety.

加强清醒检查站计划和宣传活动对墨西哥莱昂市机动车碰撞和伤亡事故的影响:合成对照研究。
目的:在拉丁美洲,醉酒驾驶是造成道路交通伤亡的主要原因。我们评估了墨西哥莱昂市酒驾干预措施对道路交通安全的影响:干预措施包括从 2018 年 12 月 19 日开始加大对酒后驾驶的处罚力度、加强清醒检查站和以年轻人为重点的大众媒体宣传活动。我们根据与莱昂的相似性,利用 2015 年至 2019 年的关键预测因子,从 87 个墨西哥城市中选出 12 个城市,创建了一个合成对照莱昂。我们利用来自警方、保险理赔和生命登记的数据,评估了干预措施对道路交通碰撞事故的总体影响,以及对受伤、死亡和涉酒碰撞事故的影响:与合成对照组相比,利昂在干预后警方报告的总碰撞率(17%)和受伤碰撞率(33%)显著降低。涉及酒精的碰撞事故比合成对照组低 38%。警方报告的致命碰撞事故减少了 28%,而生命登记的道路交通死亡事故减少了 12%,但这些下降在统计上并不显著。我们没有发现对保险碰撞索赔的影响。在评估年中,这些变化具有异质性,初期效果较强,到年底效果较弱:结论:莱昂的酒后驾车政策在实施的第一年减少了交通碰撞和伤亡事故,但随着时间的推移,效果逐渐减弱,这与高收入环境和其他拉美国家的干预措施类似。支持将类似政策推广到该地区的其他城市,可以改善道路安全。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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