NTL Record

Title Evaluation of Responsible Beverage Service to Reduce Impaired Driving by 21- to 34-Year-Old Drivers
Record ID 62093
Personal Name
Creator
Fell, James C.; Fisher, Deborah A.; Yao, Jie; McKnight, A. Scott; Blackman, Kenneth O.; Coleman, Heidi
Personal Name
Contributor
Levy, Martin; Ciccel, DeCarlo
Corporate Creator Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation
Corporate
Contributor
United States. Department of Transportation. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
Publisher United States. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
Publication Date 20170401
Language English
Abstract Despite progress in reducing impaired driving, young adult drivers 21 to 34 remain a particularly high-risk group for involvement in impaired-driving-related crashes. A number of studies have revealed that approximately half of intoxicated drivers had their last drink at a licensed bar or restaurant. Researchers have studied risk factors associated with drinking leading to a wide range of harmful incidents (violence, injury, and illness) and concluded, “the most significant risk factors were the amount of alcohol consumed and whether obviously intoxicated customers continue to be served.” The two communities participating in this demonstration and evaluation—Monroe County, New York, and Cleveland, Ohio—agreed to implement an intervention that integrated outreach and responsible beverage service (RBS) training, targeted enforcement and, as necessary, implemented corrective actions by the enforcement agency to a random sample of identified problem bars. The immediate goal of the RBS/enforcement program was to reduce the practice of over-serving and serving to obviously intoxicated individuals in bars and restaurants in each community through training and enforcement. The long-term goal of the program was to reduce driving-while-intoxicated (DWI) arrests and impaired-driving-related traffic crashes by 21- to 34-year-olds. Overall, the indications from this study are that RBS training plus enforcement reduced the incidence of bar patron intoxication (and potential impaired driving). It appears that when bar managers and owners are aware of the program and the enforcement of it and servers are properly trained in RBS, fewer patrons become highly intoxicated (i.e., over-served), and an effort is made to deny service to obviously intoxicated patrons. Given that about half of drivers arrested for DWI are coming from licensed establishments in any given community, if implementation of this strategy is widespread, it could have an effect on reducing impaired driving. RBS training, followed by visible and sustained enforcement, may be an important strategy to combat impaired driving and injuries associated with excessive drinking. Many of the findings in this study were consistent with expectations regarding the intervention’s influence, and the cumulative evidence points to a positive effect in reducing intoxication at bars. These findings validate prior research on RBS as a countermeasure to prevent excessive drinking followed by impaired driving and indicate that more widespread implementation in communities, although not easily accomplished, could have an effect, not only on impaired driving, but also on other alcohol-attributable harm.
Rosap ID dot:2092
Rosap URL https://rosap.ntl.bts.gov/view/dot/2092
ResearchHub ID 633
TRT Terms Alcohol use; Drinking establishments; Drunk driving; Evaluation and assessment; Intoxication; Law enforcement; Outreach; Training; Young adults
General Subjects Responsible beverage service; RBS; alcohol control policy; alcohol over-service practices; serving obviously intoxicated patrons; enforcement; Research Hub
Geographical
Coverage
United States; New York; Ohio; Cleveland (Ohio)
TRIS Online
Accession No
1637038
Contract Number DTNH22-06-D-00035, Task 8
Report Number DOT HS 812 398
Availability NHTSA - Behavioral Safety Research
Resource type Tech Report
URL https://ntlrepository.blob.core.windows.net/lib/62000/62000/62093/13009_servingyoungdriversreport_041217_v2-tag.pdf
Format PDF
Database NTL Digital Repository