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Find us on FacebookFollow us on TwitterVolume 87: January 3, 2012   

Indiana police step up drunken-driving patrols, sobriety checkpoints

Indianapolis, IN. - Indiana law enforcement agencies are working to keep motorists safe this holiday season as police step up impaired driving patrols on Hoosier roadways this week.

 

Members of Indiana's 35 DUI Task Forces will conduct high-visibility enforcement activities such as saturation patrols and sobriety checkpoints across the state through New Year's Day.

 

A total of 135 people died as a result of an impaired driver on Indiana roadways in 2010. In fact, there were more than 50 alcohol-related collisions in the Hoosier state during the Christmas and New Year's holiday periods alone.

 

"Impaired driving is a serious and deadly crime," said Indiana Criminal Justice Institute (ICJI) Traffic Safety Division Director, Ryan Klitzsch. "It's also 100 percent preventable," he continued.

 

Any amount of alcohol can affect your ability to safely operate a motor vehicle. Unfortunately, too many drivers make the mistake of getting behind the wheel even though they are clearly impaired. Nearly 25 percent of Indiana's fatal collisions in 2010 were alcohol-related. Of those incidents, 130 involved a driver that was legally alcohol-impaired.

 

"No matter if you've had way too much, or one too many, call a friend, take a cab, or sleep it off - don't get behind the wheel impaired," Klitzsch added. "By simply designating a sober driver, you could be saving a life - perhaps even your own."

 

The Indiana Criminal Justice Institute's Traffic Safety Division awards grant funding to law enforcement agencies specifically dedicated to traffic safety enforcement initiatives in state of Indiana.

 

Source: Journal Gazette


 SABMiller India launches 'Respect The Road' campaign

SABMiller India has introduced the second leg of its campaign 'Respect the Road' in the National Capital Region [a region in the Territory of Delhi, India]. Launched in October 2011, this campaign focuses on creating awareness about responsible behavior while driving. As part of the campaign, SABMiller India has collaborated with Home Safe - a chauffeur service in the NCR. 

 

This campaign has been created by Enthuse Answers. 

 

Meenakshi Sharma, vice president, sustainability and communications, SABMiller India, said, "Supporting responsible drinking behavior is one of the core sustainable development priorities for SABMiller worldwide. In India too we are engaged in promoting responsible approach to alcohol consumption. Keeping in mind the high probability of increase in drunken driving cases during the festive celebrations, we have expanded the scope of activities under this campaign to motivate people to follow traffic rules and not to mix drinking and driving. We are happy to support Gurgaon traffic police through this initiative"

 

The initiative supports and promotes responsible drinking, encouraging the use of alternatives to drinking and driving such as hiring a driver, renting a cab or having a friend drive one home. SABMiller India has rolled out this campaign in popular pubs in Gurgaon, at petrol pumps, on Facebook and via radio. 

 

Source: Campaign India


Britain's alcohol crisis: Is there a cure for the biggest hangover in Europe? 

Health Secretary rejects laws on drink prices, and says he has a plan to sober up some of Britain's drunks

Minimum pricing on alcohol will not beat Britain's burgeoning drink problem, the Health Secretary insists, defying medical experts. Andrew Lansley, who is preparing to launch a new year drive aimed at ending the country's binge drinking culture, today warns that deep-rooted drinking habits in some areas mean that boosting the price of booze will do little to curb excess.

 

This comes as Britain shakes off a collective hangover after Black Friday, the most popular night for office Christmas parties and the busiest of the year for drink-related casualties. Some ambulance services received 999 calls as frequently as every 30 seconds to deal with injured and drunk revelers.

 

New research from the Department of Health underlines how excess alcohol affects almost every aspect of British life. More than 2.6m children in the UK now live with a parent who drinks at hazardous levels. Mortality rates from liver disease among under-75s rose by 16 per cent between 2001 and 2009, new statistics show. And lost productivity because of hung over staff cost businesses £1.7bn a year.

 

Britain is the drunk man of Europe. Alcohol consumption in France, Germany and Italy is down by between 37 and 52 per cent since 1980. But in the UK it is up nine per cent, with binge drinkers sinking more booze than ever, putting unprecedented pressure on the NHS, police and social services.

 

To view the full story, click on this link: http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/health-and-families/health-news/britains-alcohol-crisis-is-there-a-cure-for-the-biggest-hangover-in-europe-6278868.html 

 

Source: The Independent

     

Text messages show promise in curbing drinking

The text messaging that can drive young people to distraction - or worse, if they're actually behind the wheel - can also be harnessed to promote better health and safety, a small new study suggests.

 

In the study, 15 heavy drinking young adults who sent and received weekly text messages tracking their alcohol consumption reported drinking less at the end of the 12-week program than they did at the beginning. By comparison, a group of similar 18- to 24-year-olds who sent but didn't receive texts and a control group that sent no texts at all didn't manage to scale back their drinking as effectively.

 

The findings were published today on the website of the journal Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research. Although the study should be considered preliminary, given its size, the researchers say that text-message programs are a promising strategy for reducing problem drinking, as well as other dangerous or unhealthy behaviors.

 

Text-based interventions are an example of what's known as "participatory health," says lead author Brian Suffoletto, M.D., an assistant professor of emergency medicine at the University of Pittsburgh.

 

"In traditional health models, patients have been in the passenger seats in healthcare. Now... they become drivers of their own health improvement. We really think this innovation is an example of not just assisting, but engaging in self-management."

 

Suffoletto and his colleagues asked the young people in the intervention group - who, like the other study participants, were identified as problem drinkers after landing in the ER - to send weekly texts tallying their drinking.

 

Depending on how much they drank that week, the participants received automated replies that either provided positive feedback ("Keep up the good work!") or urged them to limit their drinks during the following week. Those who agreed to a limit received a follow-up text suggesting strategies for responsible drinking, such as counting drinks and spacing them apart.

 

During the last month of the study, the texters reported drinking heavily on 3.4 fewer days than they had in the month prior to the study. And when they did drink, they had about two fewer drinks, on average. (Heavy drinking was defined as consuming five-plus drinks in a 24-hour period.)

 

The text messages incorporated two hallmarks of traditional alcohol counseling - self-monitoring of drinking behavior and the setting of short-term goals - but in some respects they may have improved on traditional counseling, Suffoletto says.

 

The study participants received immediate feedback on their drinking (instead of weekly or monthly feedback from a counselor), which may reinforce positive behaviors and provide a better picture of drinking habits. "Cell phones have become an appendage of our bodies, so for an assessment of actual drinking behavior, it potentially becomes more accurate than recalling [drinking]," Suffoletto says.

 

And the relative anonymity of text messaging - the participants were identified by an ID number only - may encourage candor.

 

"Prior data has shown that young adults are willing to disclose a lot more information through something like [a] short-message service than they would if they were face-to-face with a clinician," Suffoletto says.

 

The researchers envision that text message programs like those used in the study could be successfully applied to problematic behaviors besides drinking, such as illicit drug use or unprotected sex, and could even be used to encourage people to eat better, exercise more, and generally adopt and maintain healthy lifestyles.

 

Source: Health Magazine on CNN Health


White Castle Tests Selling Alcohol In Indiana

Lafayette Location Offers Beer, Wine

INDIANAPOLIS -- The White Castle hamburger chain is sipping on the idea of selling alcoholic beverages at its restaurants.

 

The 90-year-old company is testing beer and wine sales at a location in Lafayette, which combines a traditional White Castle burger joint with a Blaze Modern BBQ, a new restaurant concept also being tried out.

 

In other cities, Columbus, Ohio-based White Castle is testing an Asian food concept and a restaurant that serves grilled sandwiches.

 

Customers in Lafayette can buy a glass wine for $4.50 or a domestic beer for $3.

 

White Castle spokesman Jamie Richardson told The Columbus Dispatch that feedback from consumers has been better than expected. But he said the company hasn't decided whether to expand alcohol sales or the new concepts.

 

Source: theindychannel.com


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