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Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

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Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !. Lesson Objectives What influences you? - Public Service Announcements. Lesson Objectives. The Facts and the Stats - BAC - Mental and Physical Affects of Alcohol - Laws. Lesson Objectives. What would you do??? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX! Lesson Objectives o What influences you? - Public Service Announcements
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Page 1: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

Drinking and Driving…DON’T MIX!

Lesson Objectives

o What influences you?- Public Service

Announcements

Page 2: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

Lesson Objectives

o The Facts and the Stats- BAC- Mental and Physical Affects of Alcohol- Laws

Page 3: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

Lesson Objectives

o What would you do???

- If placed in a situation where you had to make a decision about driving after drinking (whether it be yourself or a friend), what would you do???

Page 4: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

KWLo What do you know about

Alcohol/Drugs in relation to driving?

Page 5: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

Alcohol/Drugs Drivers Ed Manuals (101-107)

o What did we learn?

Page 6: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

Alcohol’s Effect on One’sHealth and One’s Future

• Sometimes people treat you as an adult and at other times as a child.

• Learning to cope with this partial independence is a natural stage of growing up.

• It is the time when you are very vulnerable to peer pressure.

• Understanding how alcohol can destroy your hopes, dreams, and ambitions can help you resist destructive peer pressure.

Page 7: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

What are the Effects of Alcohol?

• Alcohol is a powerful and dangerous drug – it can change the way people act, think, and feel.

• The high number of traffic fatalities involving young people is the reason why every state has passed laws to make it illegal for people under 21 to buy, possess, or consume alcohol.

Page 8: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

Your Responsibilities Regarding Drinking

• Protect yourself from the threat that drinking poses to your health and well-being.

• Protect yourself and others from the risk posed by people who drink and drive.

• Don’t let friends “Drink and Drive”.

Page 9: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

• A person with a drinking problem often denies the problem, drinks alone, has trouble sleeping, and may suffer from memory loss or blackouts.

• Other symptoms can be seen in health problems such as (Liver failure, heart disease, cancer, brain damage, and malnutrition).

• Alcoholism is a DISEASE. It’s consequences are devastating, and include loss of friends and family, self-esteem, and even loss of life.

Page 10: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

How Does Alcohol Affect Driving Ability?

• Alcohol will decrease your skill and will damage you judgment no matter how good of a driver you are.

• From the moment alcohol enters your bloodstream, you begin to loose your ability to think clearly.– Even a small amount of alcohol, one

drink, causes changes in your coordination.

Page 11: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

Facts About Alcohol and Driving

Page 12: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

Facts About Alcohol and Driving

Blood Alcohol Concentration (BAC)

• Even one drink of alcohol causes changes in the body. Alcohol is not digested, as food is. Rather, it’s absorbed into the bloodstream through walls of the stomach and small intestine. It is than carried to all parts of the body. Alcohol has the greatest effect on the brain because that is the organ that controls all body functions.

Page 13: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

Are They The Same?

• Beer

• Whiskey

• Wine

• Cooler

• Margarita

Page 14: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

Elimination RateBAC

9 10 11 12 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 1HRS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15

ABSORPTION ELIMINATION

.05

.16 = PEAK @ 1:00

INTOXICATED LEGALLY (.08)@ 6:00 am

IMPAIRED (.05) @ 9:30 am

STOPS DRINKING @ 12:30 am

.00

.10

.15

.20

16

Page 15: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

Facts About Alcohol and Driving

M.A.D.D.• In 2006, an estimated 15,827 people died in alcohol-

related traffic crashes—an average of one every 33 minutes.

• These deaths constitute 37 percent of the 42,532 total traffic fatalities.

• Of these, 13,470 involved a driver with an illegal BAC (.08 or greater).

• On average someone is killed by a drunk driver every 39 minutes.

• About three in every ten Americans will be involved in an alcohol-related crash at some time in their lives.

Page 16: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

Facts About Alcohol and Driving

• By ages 19 and 20, 70 percent of all drinkers engage in heavy drinking, suggesting that the majority of young people are at great risk of making poor decisions that have significant long-term consequences.

• About 91 percent of all drinks consumed by teenagers are consumed by those who drink heavily.

• Forty percent of deaths for persons aged 15 to 20 stem from automobile collisions according to the CDC.

• The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration notes twenty-three percent of teenage drivers in fatal car wrecks possessed a blood-alcohol level above the legal limit of .08.

Page 17: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

Myths and Facts About Alcohol

Myth – Beer is not as intoxicating as hard liquor.Fact – False. A 12 oz beer, 5oz glass of wine, &

1½ ounce shot of 80 proof liquor = same amount of alcohol.

Myth – You can’t get drunk on a full stomach.Fact – Alcohol is just absorbed in the bloodstream

more slowly now. All of the alcohol will still get into the bloodstream and travel to the brain and other parts of your body.

Page 18: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

Myths and Facts About Alcohol

Myth – You must drink because friends want you to even though you are the driver.

Fact – Real friends wouldn’t want you to hurt yourself or others.

Myth – Coffee, cold shower, and a lot of exercise can sober you up.

Fact – No way! The body can’t burn up much more than ½ ounce of alcohol in one hour. Only Time can sober you up.

Page 19: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

Myths and Facts About Alcohol

Myth – Alcohol makes you feel better when your down in the dumps.

Fact – Not Really. Alcohol is a DEPRESSANT, or “Downer”. It may make a person feel worse than before.

Myth – Sometimes, cause of peer pressure at a party, there in no other choice but drink.

Fact – You do have a choice. Don’t Drink. Think of all the dangers and driving statistics related to your age group.

Page 20: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

The Physical Effects of Alcohol

• Drinking Drivers 16-19 years old have a higher fatal crash probability than any other age group

• People who have little or no driving experience have a higher risk of being involved in a fatal crash.

Page 21: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

Affects Persons Differently

TolerancePersonality

MoodExperience

FatigueMedication

WeightAge

Page 22: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

The Physical Effects of Alcohol

1.)Reaction Time: After 2 or more drinks a driver becomes physically slower and less alert. In fact, for some people, it may only take one drink.

2.)Coordination: Movements get sloppy and uncoordinated. Drivers who have been drinking are less able than others to make critical decisions. (Trouble steering, miss brake pedal, or step on it too late)

Page 23: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

The Physical Effects of Alcohol

3.)Distance (Depth Perception): Alcohol affects the ability to judge distance, or depth. Drinking drivers may perceive something as farther away than it really is.

4.)Speed Perception: Drinking drivers can’t tell how fast another vehicle is approaching. Such drivers have a distorted sense of how fast they are going.

Page 24: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

The Physical Effects of Alcohol

5.)Vision: Alcohol affects the reflex action of the eyes that causes the pupils to become smaller in bright light and larger as light diminishes. Similar to night blindness, drinkers’ pupils don’t return to normal size quickly enough once headlights have passed.

Alcohol impairs side, color, and night vision, eye focus, and it may lead to double vision.

Page 25: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !
Page 27: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

Mental Effects of Alcohol• Alcohol also affects the part of the

brain that controls the ability to reason.

• Alcohol affects your judgment and can make you feel as is you are thinking more clearly than usual.– This can affect drunk drivers because

they don’t have the judgment to realize something is wrong.

Page 28: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

Mental Effects of Alcohol• Alcohol affects your inhibitions, the

elements of your personality that stop you from behaving without regard to possible consequences. – In drivers, the loss of inhibition can be

very dangerous and can cause them to take chances they would normally avoid.

Page 29: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

Laws, Testsand

Penalties for Drinking and Driving

Page 30: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

Implied Consent Law

• If you are arrested for drinking and driving, you must comply/agree to take a test to determine BAC (Blood Alcohol Concentration).

• This is a law in all 50 states.• If you refuse, the penalty is

equivalent to driving with a BAC of 0.10% or higher

Page 31: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

Zero Tolerance Law• Teenage drivers with any BAC over

0.01 violate the 21-year-old minimum drinking age laws.

Page 32: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

Tests for Intoxication• Chemical analysis of blood or urine• Breath-Test to determine the

percentage of alcohol in the breath.• Field Sobriety Test

1.Standing on one leg2.Walking in a straight line

3. HGN Reflex

Page 33: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus

• HGN refers to a lateral or horizontal jerking when the eye gazes to the side.

• In impaired driving context, alcohol consumption hinders the ability of the brain to correctly control eye muscles, therefore causing the jerk or bounce associated with HGN.

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Page 35: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !
Page 37: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

Penalties and Consequences21 years of age/BAC .08-.10

• License Suspension• $250 to $400 fine• 12 to 48 hours in an Intoxicated Driver

Resource Center (IDRC) - $75/day• Possibly up to 30 days imprisonment• $100 Drunk Driving Fund Fee• $100 Alcohol Education, Rehabilitation,

and Enforcement Fund Fee• $1,000 annual surcharge for 3 years• $75 Safe Neighborhood Services Fund Fee

Page 38: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

Penalties and Consequencesunder 21 years of age/BAC > .01

• License Suspension• $300 to $500 fine• 12 to 48 hours in an IDRC - $75/day• Possibly up to 30 days imprisonment• $100 DD Fund Fee• $100 AERE Fund Fee• $1,000 annual surcharge• $75 Safe Neighborhood Services Fund

Page 39: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

How Other Drugs Affect Driving Ability

Alcohol is not the only drug that can impair your ability to drive.– Almost any drug can have an effect on your

driving skill.– Drugs side effects differ (ability to make sound

decisions, change the way you think)Synergism: The interaction of one drug with another

to enhance the effect of one or both.(i.e. If a person drinks alcohol and takes a depressant,

the combo could produce an effect on the person greater than the individual effects of either drug)

Page 40: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

What drugs affect driving ability?

Over the-Counter Drugs:• Can be purchased legally w/out doctors prescription.• Used for colds, flu, headaches, allergies, etc.• Read the labels of these products for “Warnings”.• It is YOUR RESPONSIBILITY as a driver to know what

side effects may result from these medications.Prescription Drugs:• Remember to ask your doctor if you can drive safely

while you are taking any prescription medication.• Look at your medication for Warning on Bottle.

Page 41: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

What drugs affect driving ability?

Depressants:• Slow down, or depress the CNS.• These are used by doctors for patients suffering

from anxiety, high tension, or high blood pressure.

• They slow down a uses mental and physical activity.

• They slow down reflexes and have a harmful effect on coordination.– Examples) Alcohol, Methadone, sleeping pills.

Page 42: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

What drugs affect driving ability?

Stimulants:• Speed up, or stimulate the CNS.• Some drivers take them to stay away when

driving long distances.• Can give user false feeling of well-being and make

them feel super alert.• Often cause drivers to take foolish risks.• When the effects of stimulants wears off, users

can become very tired quickly. • Many stimulants are illegal.

– Examples) Amphetamines (Speed), Cocaine.

Page 43: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !
Page 44: Drinking and Driving… DON’T MIX !

Marijuana and Driving Marijuana:• After alcohol, marijuana is the most often found

with drivers in collisions. • Marijuana can affect drivers in many ways such as:

– Loss of Tracking Ability: Ability to maintain a vehicle in a line

– Distance Judgment: Following too closely– Vigilance: Not remaining attentive – Divided Attention: Can’t remain focused on driving


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