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Traffic Engineering

Contact for General Highway questions, concerns, or comments

 

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Nebraska Office of Highway Safety
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ALCOHOL'S TRIP THROUGH THE BODY

1.  Mouth and Esophagus: Alcohol is an irritant to the delicate linings of the throat and food pipe. It burns as it goes down.

2.  Stomach and Intestines: Alcohol has an irritating effect on the stomach’s protective lining, resulting in gastric or duodenal ulcers. This condition, if it becomes acute, can cause peritonitis, or perforation of the stomach wall. In the small intestine, alcohol blocks absorption of such substances as thiamine, folic acid, fat, vitamin B1, vitamin B12, and amino acids.

3.  Bloodstream: Ninety-five (95) percent of the alcohol taken into the body is absorbed into the bloodstream through the lining of the stomach and duodenum. Once in the bloodstream, alcohol quickly goes to every cell and tissue in the body. Alcohol causes red blood cells to clump together in thick wads, slowing circulation and depriving tissues of oxygen. It also causes anemia by reducing red blood cell production. Alcohol slows the ability of white cells to engulf and destroy bacteria and degenerates the clotting ability of blood platelets.

4.  Pancreas: Alcohol irritates the cells of the pancreas, causing them to swell, thus blocking the flow of digestive enzymes. The chemicals, unable to enter the small intestine, being to digest the pancreas, leading to acute hemorrhagic pancreatitis. One out of five patients who develop this disease die during the first attack. Pancreatitis can destroy the pancreas and cause a lack of insulin, thus resulting in diabetes.

5.  Liver: Alcohol inflames the cells of the liver, causing them to swell and block the tiny canal to the small intestines. This prevents the bile from being filtered properly through the liver. Jaundice develops, turning the whites of the eyes and skin yellow. Each drink of alcohol increases the number of liver cells destroyed, eventually causing cirrhosis of the liver. This disease is eight times more frequent among alcoholics than among non-alcoholics.

6.  Heart: Alcohol causes inflammation of the heart muscle. It has a toxic effect on the heart and causes increased amounts of fat to collect, thus disrupting its normal metabolism.

7.  Urinary Bladder and Kidneys: Alcohol inflames the lining of the urinary bladder, making it unable to stretch properly. In the kidneys, alcohol causes increased loss of fluids through its irritating effect.

8.  Sex Glands: Swelling of the prostrate gland caused by alcohol interferes with the ability of the male to perform sexually. It also interferes with the ability to climax during intercourse.

9.  Brain: The most dramatic and noticed effect of alcohol is on the brain. It depresses brain centers, progressively producing in-coordination, confusion, disorientation, stupor, anesthesia, coma, and death. Alcohol kills brain cells, and brain damage is permanent. Drinking over a period of time causes loss of memory, judgment, and learning ability.

Source: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA)

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EFFECTS OF ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION

Information in this table shows the BAC level at which the effect usually is first observed, and has been gathered from a variety of sources including the National Highway Safety Administration, the National Institute on Alcohol and Alcoholism, the American Medical Association, the American Automobile Association, and the National Commission Against Drunk Driving, and www.webMD.com.

Blood Alcohol Concentration (BAC) Typical Effects Predictable Effects on Driving
0.02%

 

Partial loss of judgment
Relaxation
Slight body warmth
Altered mood
Reduction in visual functions (rapid tracking of moving target)
Decline in ability to perform two tasks at the same time (divided attention)
0.05%

 

Exaggerated behavior
May have loss of small-muscle control (as in focusing one’s eyes)
Judgment changes
Good feelings
Lowered alertness
Release of inhibition
Decline in coordination
Lessened ability to track moving objects
Difficulty steering
Reduced response to emergency driving situations
Lessened ability to brake appropriately
0.08%

 

Muscle coordination becomes poor (e.g., balance, speech, vision, reaction time, and hearing)
Difficulty detecting danger
Judgment, self-control, reasoning, and memory are affected
Concentration impaired
Short-term memory loss
Speed control altered
Information processing capability lessened (e.g., signal detection, visual search)
Impaired perception and lessening of peripheral vision
0.10%

 

Marked deterioration of reaction time and control
Affected speech, poor coordination, and slowed thinking
Reduced ability to maintain lane position and brake correctly
0.15%

 

Far less muscle control than normal
Vomiting may occur
Considerable loss of balance
Possible memory loss
Considerable impairment in vehicle control, attention to driving task, and in visual and auditory information processing capability

 

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STATISTICS

According to NHTSA in 2009,

  • Of the 10,839 people who died in alcohol-impaired-driving crashes in 2009, 7,281 (67%) were drivers with a BAC of .08 or higher.  The remaining fatalities consisted of 2,891 (27%) motor vehicle occupants and 667 (6%) nonoccupants.

  • These fatalities represent an average of one alcohol-impaired-driving fatality every 48 minutes.
  • The rate of alcohol impairment among drivers involved in fatal crashes was four times higher at night than during the day (37% versus 9%).

  • 16 percent of all drivers involved in fatal crashes during the week were alcohol-impaired, compared to 31% on weekends.

  • The most frequent recorded BAC level among drinking drivers in fatal crashes was .17.
  • In 2009, 6,685 (65%) of the drivers involved in fatal crashes who had been drinking had a BAC of .15 or greater.

  • Of the 1,314 children age 14 and younger killed in motor vehicle crashes, 181 or 14% occurred in alcohol-impaired crashes.

  • Out of those 181 deaths, 92 or 51% of these children killed were riding in vehicles where the driver had a BAC of .08 or higher.
     

NEBRASKA ALCOHOL-RELATED TRAFFIC ENFORCEMENT AND CRASHES - 2011

DWI Arrests N/A    
Alcohol-Related Convictions 10,549 Death Rate (Per 100 Million Miles of Travel)

0.93

Conviction Rate N/A  
Total Crashes 32,302 Alcohol-Related Crashes 1,822
Injury Crashes 11,185 Alcohol-Related Injury Crashes 837
Total Injured 16,108 Alcohol-Related Injured 1,185
Fatal Crashes 164 Alcohol-Related Fatal Crashes 49
Total Deaths 181 Alcohol-Related Deaths 51

NEBRASKA ALCOHOL-RELATED CRASH DATA

  • NE Alcohol-Related Crashes - 1997-2011
  • NE Alcohol-Related Crashes Per 100 Million Miles - 1995-2011
  • NE Alcohol-Related Crashes By Month - 2008-2011
  • NE Alcohol-Related Crashes/Fatalities vs. All Fatal Crashes/Fatalities - 2005-2011
  • NE Alcohol-Related Fatal Crashes Per 100 Million Miles Traveled 1990-2011
  • NE Alcohol-Related Fatalities vs. All Fatalities - 1990-2011
  • NE Alcohol-Related Fatalities Per 100 Million Miles Traveled - 1990-2011
  • NE Cost Estimate for Alcohol-Related Motor Vehicle Crashes - 2011
  • NE Driving Under the Influence (DUI) Arrests vs. Convictions - 1996-2011
  • NE Driving Under the Influence (DUI) Offenses - 2000-2010
  • NE Fatal Crashes Per 100 Million Miles Traveled - 1990-2011
  • NE Fatalities Per 100 Million Miles Traveled - 1990-2011
  • NE History of Alcohol-Related Traffic Crashes - 1975-2010
  • NE Liquor Law Offenses - 2000-2010
  • NE Traffic Fatalities vs. Fatal Crashes - 1983-2011
  • NE Department of Motor Vehicles Annual Report (Licensed Drivers, Revocations, Suspensions, Administrative License Hearings)

  • Additional Crash Statistics

    NHTSA Traffic Safety Facts:
  • Alcohol-Impaired Driving - 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010
  • High BAC Laws - 2008
  • State Alcohol-Impaired Driving Estimates - 2007, 2008, 2009
  • , 2010

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    TRAFFIC SAFETY RESOURCE PROSECUTOR

    The Traffic Safety Resource Prosecutor (TRSP) is available to assist City and County Attorneys with prosecution of impaired driving and motor vehicle homicide cases. The TSRP is also available to provide training and other technical assistance in traffic-related cases.

    For more information, contact Ed Vierk at the Nebraska Attorney General's Office,                        phone (402)471-3824 or by email at Ed.Vierk@nebraska.gov.

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    LINKS TO EXTERNAL WEBSITES

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