yes drinking alcohol can lead to a car accident. up to these days every few american are dying,critical additions and some are not even dying. that's why it is good to stop doing drunk driving. and some people say that every 2 min people die cause of alcohol.
Answer: Drunk driving is one of America's deadliest crimes," said acting Secretary of Transportation Maria Cino. Of all U.S. traffic deaths during 2005, 39 percent involved alcohol.-U.S. DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION.Car accidents kill more than one million people and injure approximately 50 million each year. Drivers who are otherwise responsible and safe may take great risks by driving after they drink an alcoholic beverage. During 2008, in the United States, more than 37,000 people lost their lives in automobile accidents. About a third of these died in crashes involving drivers who had been drinking. Even the smallest amount of alcohol can impair your driving skills. Some resolve not to drink any alcohol at all if they are going to drive.
Alcohol. Intoxication of one of the drivers is involved in many traffic accidents, and is involved in 45% of all traffic fatalities.Added:That is true that alcohol is the most common cause of FATAL collisions.However human error, mainly distractions, are the most common cause of ALL traffic crashes according to NHTSA.
Alcohol is a factor in about 40-45% of traffic crashes.
Yes. Speeding is the second leading cause of all fatal crashes.
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True. And this arises a bright idea: majority (60%) of the fatal traffic crashes is caused by sober drivers, drunken drivers cause less. Let's encourage the drivers to drink before driving, thus decrease the number of fatalities on the roads! Statistics is a science if one can interpret the figures...
23,013 alcohol-related crashes
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In 2019, there were 94 infants under the age of 1 killed in alcohol-related crashes in the United States.
How many car crashes happen a year because of alcohol
In 1998, 15,935 people were killed in alcohol-related traffic crashes, an average of one every 33 minutes. These deaths constituted approximately 38.4% of the total 41,471 total traffic fatalities. (NHTSA, 1999)