UCI studies drunk-driving
A UC Irvine professor is conducting a study to determine whether the
state’s zero-tolerance law for underage drinkers who drive is working
to snuff out further substance abuse.
Armed with a $97,000 grant, professor Christopher Carpenter is set
to begin a 16-month study to test his theory that incentives have a
role in substance abuse laws as well as in economics.
In previous research, Carpenter found that having a zero-tolerance
law reduces drinking by 13% among young men between the ages of 16
and 20. Now he wants to find out whether the tough drunk-driving laws
have curbed abuse of other substances, namely tobacco and marijuana.
“What we think is really happening is that when the kids find out
about these laws, they’re changing their incentives,” Carpenter said.
If a relationship exists between drinking alcohol and smoking,
then perhaps the drunk-driving laws will help reduce smoking,
Carpenter said. It’s also possible the drunk-driving laws could have
the opposite effect, pushing young adults to other forms of substance
abuse, Carpenter said.
“Instead of ‘Hey, let’s not drink anymore,’ [the response might
be] ‘Let’s just get high,’” Carpenter said.
According to the California vehicle code, it is illegal for anyone
under 21 to drive with a blood alcohol level of .01% or higher.
“You take one drink as a minor and you’re going to have a .01,”
said Newport Beach Police Sgt. Bill Hartford.
Unless the minor has a blood-alcohol level of .08, however, he or
she may not be arrested, Hartford said.
Depending on the level, the officer can revoke the license and
issue a citation, Hartford said.
Carpenter’s research will be based on data from two surveys of
youth substance abuse in the U.S. in the 1990s, he said. The studies
-- the Centers for Disease Control’s “Behavioral Risk Factor
Surveillance System” and a University of Michigan study called
“Monitoring the Future” -- supply information about health habits,
including smoking and drinking, Carpenter said.
Carpenter’s research is funded by a grant awarded several months
ago by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the University of
California. Carpenter will conduct the research along with Duke
University Professor Philip Jackson Cook.
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