Alcohol consumption and driving intentions amongst hotel patrons
- 1 January 1993
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Drug and Alcohol Review
- Vol. 12 (1) , 23-35
- https://doi.org/10.1080/09595239300185711
Abstract
To examine the extent to which hotel patrons drink in excess of current health recommendations, and to identify risk factors for excessive drinking, hotel patrons were invited to participate in a survey of social drinking, which included a free breath test. Patrons were approached at 15 min. intervals, and 1000 subjects were studied. Amongst this group of hotel patrons interviewed, 1 in 2 had consumed alcohol in excess of the daily limit recommended by the National Health & Medical Research Council. One in 10 intending drivers had a BAC over the legal limit. Excessive drinking and drink driving appear to be prevalent amongst hotel patrons, and hotels should be targets for interventions designed to reduce these problems. For example, the National Guidelines for the Responsible Serving of Alcohol should be more widely practised.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Levels of drunkenness of customers leaving licensed premises in Perth, Western Australia: a comparison of high and low ‘;risk’ premisesBritish Journal of Addiction, 1992
- Server intervention: what chance in Australia?Drug and Alcohol Review, 1991
- Excess mortality associated with alcohol consumption.BMJ, 1988
- The dialectic of drinking in Australian life: from the Rum Corps to the wine columnAustralian Drug and Alcohol Review, 1988
- The contribution of blood alcohol concentration formulae to establishing a responsible drinking level for femalesAustralian Drug and Alcohol Review, 1988
- Clinical Pharmacokinetics of EthanolClinical Pharmacokinetics, 1987
- Youth, alcohol and relative risk of crash involvementAccident Analysis & Prevention, 1986
- To Drink (Moderately) or Not to Drink?New England Journal of Medicine, 1984
- ABC of alcohol: tools of detection.BMJ, 1981
- Alcohol and alcoholism: overture to the alcohol debate.BMJ, 1981