6533b7d1fe1ef96bd125d661
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Alcohol-impaired Walking in 16 Countries: A Theory-Based Investigation.
Maria De Fátima Pereira Da SilvaDuy Q. Nguyen-phuocAli Kemal ÇElikDaniel DemantJ.e. RodOscar Oviedo-trespalaciosJean Carlos NatividadeSergio A. UsecheSibele Dias De AquinoAna Martí-beldaQuan YuanJoonha ParkErkan OktaySamira RamezaniYonggang WangMiguel Barboza-palominoLaura Martínez-buelvasMatúš ŠUchaMario VelindroGabriel Dorantes ArgandarMauricio Orozco-fontalvoTiina RinneElisabeth RubieTakashi TsubakitaRui Sousa MendesAnna WlodarczykTatiana VolkodavRusdi Bin RusliMark J. KingVioleta EneaJorge Tiago Bastossubject
MaleTheory of planned behavioursubstance usePoison controlTheory of Planned BehaviourHuman Factors and ErgonomicsPedestrianIntentionWalkingSubstance useSuicide preventionOccupational safety and health03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineRisk-TakingSurveys and Questionnaires0502 economics and businessInjury preventionHumansmulti-country study030212 general & internal medicineSafety Risk Reliability and QualityPedestrians050210 logistics & transportation05 social sciencesLogistics & TransportationPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthTheory of planned behaviorAccidents TrafficHuman factors and ergonomicsactive travelMulti-country studyActive travel3. Good healthRisk perception1117 Public Health and Health Services 1507 Transportation and Freight Services 1701 PsychologyCross-Sectional StudiesAlcoholPsychologyVulnerable road usershuman activitiesvulnerable road usersDemographydescription
Alcohol is a global risk factor for road trauma. Although drink driving has received most of the scholarly attention, there is growing evidence of the risks of alcohol-impaired walking. Alcohol-impaired pedestrians are over-represented in fatal crashes compared to non-impaired pedestrians. Additionally, empirical evidence shows that alcohol intoxication impairs road-crossing judgements. Besides some limited early research, much is unknown about the global prevalence and determinants of alcohol-impaired walking. Understanding alcohol-impaired walking will support health promotion initiatives and injury prevention. The present investigation has three aims: (1) compare the prevalence of alcohol-impaired walking across countries; (2) identify international groups of pedestrians based on psychosocial factors (i.e., Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB) and perceptions of risk); and (3) investigate how segments of pedestrians form their intention for alcohol-impaired walking using the extended TPB (i.e. subjective norm, attitudes, perceived control, and perceived risk). A cross-sectional design was applied. The target behaviour question was “have you been a pedestrian when your thinking or physical ability (balance/strength) is affected by alcohol?” to ensure comparability across countries. Cluster analysis based on the extended TPB was used to identify groups of countries. Finally, regressions were used to predict pedestrians’ intentions per group. A total of 6,166 respondents (Age M(SD) = 29.4 (14.2); Males = 39.2%) completed the questionnaire, ranging from 12.6% from Russia to 2.2% from Finland. The proportion of participants who reported never engaging in alcohol-impaired walking in the last three months ranged from 30.1% (Spain) to 83.1% (Turkey). Four groups of countries were identified: group-1 (Czech Republic, Spain, and Australia), group-2 (Russia and Finland), group-3 (Japan), and group-4 (final ten countries including Colombia, China, and Romania). Pedestrian intentions to engage in alcohol- impaired walking are predicted by perceptions of risk and TPB-psychosocial factors in group-1 and group-4. Favourable TPB-beliefs and low perceived risk increased alcohol-impaired walking intentions. Conversely, subjective norms were not significant in group-2 and only perceived risk predicted intention in group-3. The willingness of pedestrians to walk when alcohol-impaired differs significantly across the countries in this study. Perceived risk was the only common predictor among the 16 countries.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
---|---|---|---|---|
2021-09-01 |