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Transport Canada > Road Safety > The Alcohol-Crash Problem in Canada: 1999

Prepared by
D.R. Mayhew, S. W. Brown and H.M. Simpson
The Traffic Injury Research Foundation of Canada
Ottawa, Ontario

TP 11759E
2001


ABSTRACT

This report describes the magnitude and characteristics of the alcohol-crash problem in Canada during 1999 as well as trends in the problem. 

Information contained in this report was drawn from two national databases compiled and maintained by the Traffic Injury Research Foundation (TIRF) and funded jointly by Transport Canada and the Canadian Council of Motor Transport Administrators (CCMTA). One database contains information on persons fatally injured in motor vehicle crashes; the other has information on persons seriously injured in motor vehicle crashes.

The title and contents of this report and the report last year differ from that of previous annual reports in this series produced by TIRF under funding from Transport Canada and CCMTA. Previous reports focussed exclusively on the alcohol-fatal crash problem, defined in terms of the number and percent of fatally injured drivers (and pedestrians) who had been drinking. The present report (as well as the one last year) also includes data on alcohol in fatally injured drivers and pedestrians but it extends information about the magnitude of the alcohol-crash problem in two ways: the report examines the number and percent of people who died in alcohol-related crashes; and it examines alcohol involvement in those crashes in which someone was seriously injured but not killed.

Thus, in the report, various indicators are used to estimate the magnitude and extent of the alcohol-crash problem in Canada during 1999 as well as changes in the problem over the past few years. The indicators include:

  • the number and percent of people who were killed in crashes that involved alcohol;
  • the number and percent of fatally injured drivers who had been drinking; 
  • the number and percent of fatally injured pedestrians who had been drinking; and
  • the number and percent of drivers in serious injury crashes that involved alcohol.

As well, these indicators are presented separately for each province and territory.

 


Full report (PDF version)

Download The Alcohol-Crash Problem in Canada: 1999 in Portable Document Format (555 Kb).   To view PDF documents you must use Adobe® Acrobat Reader. Visit the Adobe site to download the latest, free version.

If you need an alternative format or for more information, please contact us by e-mail at RoadSafetyWebMail@tc.gc.ca or call toll free 1-800-333-0371 (Ottawa area (613) 998-8616). If you need this report in a different format, please contact us at RoadSafetyWebMail@tc.gc.ca or 1 800 333 0371 (Ottawa area 1 613 998 8616).


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