A motor-vehicle alcohol-related traffic-safety ranking of U.S. states this year that was based on the most recent available information, from 2017, may possibly reflect the comparatively low percentage of motorists in this refreshingly wholesome Beehive State who are actually driving a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol.
Observations for a rationally religious and implicitly deistic modern religion, public-policy writing, creative brainstorming and sociological writing from an environmental-protection-minded and crime-deterrence-minded, law-enforcement-minded, alcohol-free, lifelong non-Christian, conservative left-wing single adult gentleman who is also a direct descendant of Rev. William Brewster--Head Chaplain on Mayflower, religious leader at Plymouth, and adviser there to Governor William Bradford.
Saturday, April 9, 2022
AN APPARENT TRIBUTE TO THE COMPARATIVELY LOW PERCENTAGE OF MOTORISTS IN THE BEEHIVE STATE WHO ARE ACTUALLY DRIVING A MOTOR VEHICLE WHILE UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF ALCOHOL: RANKING OF U.S. STATES REVEALS UTAH'S SUCCESS
The factual source on this is "Alcohol.org", a copyright-2022 website provided by Recovery Brands, LLC, a subsidiary of American Addiction Centers, Inc. (AAC). According to this website, "AAC is a leading provider of both residential and outpatient addiction treatment services."
The apparently authoritative blog below contains the following very noteworthy statement:
"Based on the number of alcohol-impaired driving fatalities per 100k (100,000) people, (Utah's bordering state of) Wyoming had the highest rate of fatalities in the U.S., with a rate of 7.6. South Carolina and North Dakota took second and third place, both with an average rate of 6.3 and 6.1, respectively.
"New Jersey had the fewest alcohol-impaired driving fatalities with a rate of 1.4 per 100k people. Minnesota and New York tied for second on this metric with a rate 1.5 and UTAH PLACED THIRD WITH 1.7 (UPPER-CASED by myself, John Kevin McMillan of Salt Lake County, Utah, FOR EMPHASIS)."
The bordering state of New Mexico, by contrast, had an alcohol-impaired motor-vehicle-driving fatalities rate of 5.8---more than three times the rate of Utah. The bordering state of Idaho had an alcohol-impaired motor-vehicle-driving fatalities rate of 3.5, more than twice the rate of Utah. The Utah-bordering states of Colorado and Nevada each had respective alcohol-impaired motor-vehicle-driving fatalities rates of 3.2 and 3---each nearly twice the rate of Utah.
In the category of driving fatalities per 100,000 residents that involved a motorist under the influence of alcohol who was age 20 or younger, UTAH HAD THE THIRD-LOWEST RATE OF ANY U.S. STATE: 0.5 PER 100,000 RESIDENTS.
Neighboring states to Utah and their comparable per-capita incidence of driving fatalities per 100,000 residents that involved a motorist under the influence of alcohol who was age 20 or younger are:
Wyoming, 2.5---five times the rate of Utah;
New Mexico, 2.1---more than four times the rate of Utah;
Colorado, 1.1---more than twice the rate of Utah;
Idaho, 1 --- twice the fatality rate of Utah;
Nevada, 0.9, nearly twice the fatality rate of Utah.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please Leave Your Comments Here.