Drunk drivers
People driving under the influence of alcohol are commonly referred to as drunk drivers, or drink-drivers. When charged with this as a crime, it may either be referred to as a DUI (Driving Under the Influence) or a DWI (Driving While Intoxicated), where a DUI is generally considered to be a lesser crime. Studies have been performed to identify commonalities between severe drunk drivers. Laws are also in place to protect citizens from the consequences incurred by drunk drivers.
Common Personality Traits
Although situations differ and each person is unique, some common traits have been identified among drunk drivers. In the study "personality traits and mental health of severe drunk drivers in Sweden", 162 Swedish DUI offenders of all ages were studied to find links in psychological factors and characteristics. There are a wide variety of characteristics common among DUI offenders which are discussed, including: "anxiety, depression, inhibition, low assertiveness, neuroticism and introversion".[1] There is also a more specific personality type found, typically more antisocial, among repeat DUI offenders. It is not uncommon for them to actually be diagnosed with antisocial personality disorder (ASPD) and exhibit some of the following personality traits: "low social responsiveness, lack of self-control, hostility, poor decision-making lifestyle, low emotional adjustment, aggression, sensation seeking and impulsivity".[1]
It is also common for offenders to use drinking as a coping mechanism, not necessarily for social or enjoyment reasons, when they are antisocial in nature and have a father with a history of alcoholism. Offenders who begin drinking at an earlier age for thrills and "fun" are more likely to be antisocial later in their lives. The majority of the sample, 72%, came from what is considered more "normal" circumstances. This group was older when they began drinking, came from families without a history of alcoholism, were relatively well-behaved as children, were not as physically and emotionally affected by alcohol when compared with the rest of the study, and had the less emotional complications, such as anxiety and depression. The smaller portion of the sample, 28%, comes from what is generally considered less than desirable circumstances, or "not normal". They tended to start drinking heavily earlier in life and "exhibited more premorbid risk factors, had a more severe substance abuse and psychosocial impairment."[1]
Various characteristics associated with drunk drivers were found more often in one gender than another. Females were more likely to be affected by both mental and physical health problems, have family and social problems, have a greater drug use, and were frequently unemployed. However, the females tended to have less legal issues than the typical male offender. Some specific issues females dealt with were that "almost half of the female alcoholics had previously attempted to commit suicide, and almost one-third had suffered from anxiety disorder." In contrast with females, males were more likely to have in-depth problems and more involved complications, such as "a more complex problem profile, i.e. more legal, psychological, and work-related problems when compared with female alcoholics."[1] In general the sample, when paralleled with control groups, was tested to be much more impulsive in general.
Another commonality among the whole group was that the DUI offenders were more underprivileged when compared with the general population of drivers. A correlation has been found between lack of conscientiousness and accidents, meaning that "low conscientiousness drivers were more often involved in driving accidents than other drivers." When tested the drivers scored very high in the areas of "depression, vulnerability (to stress), gregariousness, modesty, tender mindedness", but significantly lower in the areas of "ideas (intellectual curiosity), competence, achievement striving and self-discipline."[1] The sample also tested considerably higher than the norm in "somatization, obsessions-compulsions, interpersonal sensitivity, depression, anxiety, hostility, phobic anxiety, paranoia, psychoticism", especially in the area of depression. Through this testing a previously overlooked character trait of DUI offenders was uncovered by the "low scores on the openness to experience domain."[1] This area "includes intellectual curiosity, receptivity to the inner world of fantasy and imagination, appreciation of art and beauty, openness to inner emotions, values, and active experiences." In all these various factors, there is only one which indicates relapses for driving under the influence: depression.[1]
Common Cognitive Processes
Not only can personality traits of DUI offenders be dissimilar from the rest of the population, but so can their thought processes, or cognitive processes. They are unique in that "they often drink despite the severity of legal and financial sanctions imposed on them by society."[2]
In addition to these societal restraints, DUI offenders ignore their own personal experience, including both social and physical consequences. The study "Cognitive Predictors of Alcohol Involvement and Alcohol consumption-Related Consequences in a Sample of Drunk-Driving Offenders" was performed in Albuquerque, New Mexico on the cognitive, or mental, factors of DUI offenders. Characteristics such as gender, marital status, and age of these DWI offenders were similar to those in other populations. Approximately 25% of female and 21% of male offenders had received "a lifetime diagnosis of alcohol abuse" and 62% of females and 70% of males "received a diagnosis of alcohol dependence."[2] All of the offenders had at least one DWI and males were more likely to have multiple citations. In terms of drinking patterns approximately 25% stated that "they had drunk alcohol with in the past day, while an additional 32% indicated they had drunk within the past week."[2] In regards to domestic drinking, "25% of the sample drank at least once per week in their own homes."[2] Different items were tested to see if they played a role in the decision to drink alcohol, which includes socializing, the expectation that drinking is enjoyable, financial resources to purchase alcohol, and liberation from stress at the work place. The study also focused on two main areas, "intrapersonal cues", or internal cues, that are reactions "to internal psychological or physical events" and "interpersonal cues" that result from "social influences in drinking situations."[2] The two largest factors between tested areas were damaging alcohol use and its correlation to "drinking urges/triggers."[2] Once again different behaviors are characteristic of male and female. Males are "more likely to abuse alcohol, be arrested for DWI offenses, and report more adverse alcohol-related consequences." However, effects of alcohol on females vary because the female metabolism processes alcohol significantly when compared to males, which increases their chances for intoxication.[2] The largest indicator for drinking was situational cues which comprised "indicators tapping psychological (e.g. letting oneself down, having an argument with a friend, and getting angry at something), social (e.g. relaxing and having a good time), and somatic cues (e.g. how good it tasted, passing by a liquor store, and heightened sexual enjoyment)."[2]
It may be that internal forces are more likely to drive DWI offenders to drink than external, which is indicated by the fact that the brain and body play a greater role than social influences. This possibility seems particularly likely in repeat DWI offenders, as repeat offences (unlike first-time offences) are not positively correlated with the availability of alcohol.[3] Another cognitive factor may be that of using alcohol to cope with problems. It is becoming increasingly apparently that the DWI offenders do not use proper coping mechanisms and thus turn to alcohol for the answer. Examples of such issues "include fights, arguments, and problems with people at work, all of which imply a need for adaptive coping strategies to help the high-risk drinker to offset pressures or demands."[2] DWI offenders would typically prefer to turn to alcohol than more healthy coping mechanisms and alcohol can cause more anger which can result in a vicious circle of drinking more alcohol to deal with alcohol-related issues. This is a not the way professionals tell people how to best deal with the struggles of everyday life and calls for "the need to develop internal control and self-regulatory mechanisms that attenuate stress, mollify the influence of relapse-based cues, and dampen urges to drink as part of therapeutic interventions."[2]
Perceived Recovery Rate
Another factor which may also contribute to people driving under the influence of alcohol aside from their mental state, personality, or background, is the direct effect of alcohol on their brains. A study, discussed in the article "Why drunk drivers may get behind the wheel", was done with college students in which the students were tested with "a hidden maze learning task as their BAC [Blood Alcohol Content] both rose and fell over an 8-hour period."[4] The researchers found through the study that as the students became more drunk there was an increase in their mistakes "and the recovery of the underlying cognitive impairments that lead to these errors is slower, and more closely tied to the actual blood alcohol concentration, than the more rapid reduction in participants' subjective feeling of drunkenness."[4]
The participants believed that they were recovering from the adverse effects of alcohol much more quickly than they actually were. This feeling of perceived recovery is a plausible explanation of why so many people feel that they are able to safely operate a motor vehicle when they are not yet fully recovered from the alcohol they have consumed, indicating that the recovery rates do not coincide.
This thought process and brain function that is lost under the influence of alcohol is a very key element in regards to being able to drive safely, including "making judgments in terms of traveling through intersections or changing lanes when driving."[4] These essential driving skills are lost while a person is under the influence of alcohol.
Implied Consent Laws
According to "Why drunk drivers may get behind the wheel", a Mental Health Weekly Digest article, "[a]lcohol-related motor vehicle accidents claim 17,000 American lives each year- the equivalent of one death every 30 minutes. An increase of blood alcohol concentration (BAC) of 0.02 percent doubles the relative risk of a motor vehicle crash among 16- to 20-year-old males, and that risk increases to nearly 52 times when the BAC is between 0.08 percent and 0.10 percent, the legal limits in many states."[4] In fact "To help control the number of drunk driving episodes, states have lowered the blood alcohol content limit to .08%." Stated DDS (Drunk Driving Statistics) these previous years.[5] In terms of American law driving under the influence or while intoxicated "is never a defense to a crime or motor-vehicle infraction involving reckless behavior."[6] There are laws in place to protect citizens from drunk drivers, called implied consent laws. These are found in all 50 states and require drivers to submit to field sobriety test, FSTs, breath alcohol tests, BrAC, and any other "roadside or in-custody examinations" that the police officer sees fit to administer.[7]
Drivers of any motor vehicle automatically consent to these laws, which include the associated testing, when they begin driving. These laws have thus far been shown to be in compliance with the Constitution and are legal. However, in 2016, the Kansas Supreme Court ruled that Kansans who refuse to submit to either a breath or blood test in DUI investigations cannot be criminally prosecuted for that refusal. The court found unconstitutional a state law making it a crime to refuse such a test when no court-ordered warrant exists. In its 6-1 ruling, the court found that the tests were in essence searches and the law punishes people for exercising their constitutional right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures.[8] In most jurisdictions (with the notable exception of a few, such as Brazil), refusing consent is a different crime than a DWI itself and has its own set of consequences. There have been cases where drivers were "acquitted of the DWI offense and convicted of the refusal (they are separate offenses), often with significant consequences (usually license suspension)".[9] A driver must give their full consent to comply with testing because "anything short of an unqualified, unequivocal assent to take the Breathalyzer test constitutes a refusal."[10] It has also been ruled that defendants are not allowed to request testing after they have already refused in order to aid officers' jobs "to remove intoxicated drivers from the roadways" and ensure that all results are accurate.[11]
Effects of Alcohol on Cognitive Processes
Alcohol has a very significant effect on the functions of the body which are vital to driving and being able to function. Alcohol is a depressant, which mainly affects the function of the brain. Alcohol first affects the most vital components of the brain and "when the brain cortex is released from its functions of integrating and control, processes related to judgment and behavior occur in a disorganized fashion and the proper operation of behavioral tasks becomes disrupted."[12] In all actuality alcohol weakens a variety of skills that are necessary to perform everyday tasks.
One of the main effects of alcohol is severely impairing a person's ability to shift attention from one thing to another, "without significantly impairing sensory motor functions."[13] This indicates that people who are intoxicated are not able to properly shift their attention without affecting the senses. People that are intoxicated also have a much more narrow area of usable vision than people who are sober. The information the brain receives from the eyes "becomes disrupted if eyes must be turned to the side to detect stimuli, or if eyes must be moved quickly from one point to another."[14]
Several testing mechanisms are used to gauge a person's ability to drive, which indicate levels of intoxication. One of these is referred to as a tracking task, testing hand–eye coordination, in which "the task is to keep an object on a prescribed path by controlling its position through turning a steering wheel. Impairment of performance is seen at BACs of as little as 0.7 milligrams per milliliter (mg/ml)."[15] Another form of tests is a choice reaction task, which deals more primarily with cognitive function. In this form of testing both hearing and vision are tested and drivers must give a "response according to rules that necessitate mental processing before giving the answer."[16] This is a useful gauge because in an actual driving situation drivers must divide their attention "between a tracking task and surveillance of the environment."[17] It has been found that even "very low BACs are sufficient to produce significant impairment of performance" in this area of thought process.[18]
See also
Notes
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Hubicka, Beata. "Personality traits and mental health of severe drunk drivers in Sweden."
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Scheier,Lawrence M. "cognitive Predictors of Alcohol Involvement and Alcohol-Related Consequences in a Sample of Drunk-Driving Offenders"
- ↑ Schofield, Timothy P., & Denson, Thomas F. "Temporal alcohol availability predicts first-time drunk driving, but not repeat offending"
- 1 2 3 4 "Why drunk drivers may get behind the wheel."
- ↑ "Drunk Driving Stats." Drunk Driving Stats. N.p., n.d. Web. 10 Nov. 2014.
- ↑ Ogundipe,Kehinde A. "Drunk Driving, Implied Consent, and Self-Incrimination."
- ↑ Ogundipe,Kehinde A. "Drunk Driving, Implied Consent, and Self-Incrimination."
- ↑ "Kansas DUI law that makes test refusal a crime is ruled unconstitutional". kansascity. Retrieved 2016-03-02.
- ↑ Ogundipe,Kehinde A. "Drunk Driving, Implied Consent, and Self-Incrimination."
- ↑ Ogundipe,Kehinde A. "Drunk Driving, Implied Consent, and Self-Incrimination."
- ↑ Ogundipe,Kehinde A. "Drunk Driving, Implied Consent, and Self-Incrimination."
- ↑ Mattila,Maurice J. "Psychomotor Effects of Alcohol and Drugs."
- ↑ Mattila,Maurice J. "Psychomotor Effects of Alcohol and Drugs."
- ↑ Mattila,Maurice J. "Psychomotor Effects of Alcohol and Drugs."
- ↑ Mattila,Maurice J. "Psychomotor Effects of Alcohol and Drugs."
- ↑ Mattila,Maurice J. "Psychomotor Effects of Alcohol and Drugs."
- ↑ Mattila,Maurice J. "Psychomotor Effects of Alcohol and Drugs."
- ↑ Mattila,Maurice J. "Psychomotor Effects of Alcohol and Drugs."
References
- Hubicka, Beata, et al. "Personality traits and mental health of severe drunk drivers in Sweden." Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (2009). Web. 3 September 2010.
- Mattila, Mauri J., and Esok Nuotto. "Psychomotor Effects of Alcohol and Drugs." Encyclopedia of Drugs, Alcohol & Addictive Behavior New York Macmillan Reference, 2001. Web. 15 September 2010.
- Ogundipe, Kehinde A., and Kenneth J. Weiss. "Drunk Driving, Implied Consent, and Self-Incrimination." The Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law (2009. Web. 14 September 2010.
- Scheier, Lawrence M., et al. "Cognitive Predictors of Alcohol Involvement and Alcohol Consumption-Related Consequences in a Sample of Drunk-Driving Offenders." Substance Use & Misuse (2008). Web. 10 September 2010.
- Schofield, T. P., & Denson, T. F. (2013). Temporal alcohol availability predicts first-time drunk driving, but not repeat offending. PLOS ONE, 8(8): e71169.
- "Why drunk drivers may get behind the wheel." Mental Health Weekly Digest (2010). Web. 2 September 2010.
Further reading
- Schofield, Timothy; Denson, Thomas (2013). "Temporal Alcohol Availability Predicts First-Time Drunk Driving, but Not Repeat Offending". PLOS ONE. 8: e71169. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0071169.