Abstract

Rural areas of New York State (NYS) have higher rates of alcohol-related motor vehicle (MV) crash injury than metropolitan areas. While alcohol-related injury has declined across the three geographic regions of NYS, disparities persist with rural areas having smaller declines. Our study aim was to examine factors associated with alcohol-related MV crashes in Upstate and Long Island using multi-sourced county-level data that included the Crash Outcome Data Evaluation System (CODES) with emergency department visits and hospitalizations, traffic citations, demographic, economic, transportation, alcohol outlets, and Rural–Urban Continuum Codes (RUCCS). A cross-sectional study design employed zero-truncated negative binominal regression models to assess relative risks (RR) with 95% confidence interval (CI). Counties (n = 57, 56,000 alcohol-related crashes over the 3 year study timeframe) were categorized by mean annual alcohol-related MV injuries per 100,000 population: low (24.7 ± 3.9), medium (33.9 ± 1.7) and high (46.1 ± 8.0) (p < 0.0001). In multivariable analyses, alcohol-related MV injury was elevated for non-adjacent, non-metropolitan counties (RR 2.5, 95% CI: 1.6–3.9) with higher citations for impaired driving showing a small, but significant protective effect. Less metropolitan areas had higher alcohol-related MV injury with inconsistent alcohol-related enforcement measures. In summary, higher alcohol-related MV injury rates in non-metropolitan counties demonstrated a dose–response relationship with proximity to a metropolitan area. These findings suggest areas where intervention efforts might be targeted to lower alcohol-related MV injury.

Highlights

  • Declines have been reported in alcohol-related motor vehicle (MV) crashes in New York State (NYS) over the last decade; improvements have not been uniform across the three distinctNYS geographic areas: New York City (NYC), Long Island, and Upstate [1,2,3]

  • System (CODES) [13] containing medical and law enforcement information with other multi-sourced county-level characteristics to examine our hypotheses related to factors associated with disparities in alcohol-related MV injury rates observed in regions of NYS

  • In the two less urban regions of NYS, Long Island and Upstate, we employ multi-sourced county-level data [16,17,18,19,20,21], including categories created from Rural–Urban Continuum Codes (RUCCs) [22], to examine county-level factors associated with alcohol-related injury across low, medium and high alcohol-related MV injury counties

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Summary

Introduction

Declines have been reported in alcohol-related motor vehicle (MV) crashes in New York State (NYS) over the last decade; improvements have not been uniform across the three distinct. NYS geographic areas: New York City (NYC), Long Island, and Upstate (the rest of NYS) [1,2,3]. The counties comprising these regions vary in the degree to which they possess characteristics previously reported to be associated with alcohol-impaired driving, crash risk and crash-related injury and mortality [4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12]. Public Health 2019, 16, 1346; doi:10.3390/ijerph16081346 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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