Driving under the influence can have serious consequences

  • Published
  • By Earl Rivers

Drinking and driving is always the wrong decision, which can result in severe consequences.

In the U.S. during 2022, a sobering 13,524 people died in drunk-driving crashes, which is about 37 people every day – that’s one person every 39 minutes.

In Florida, driving under the influence of alcohol is an offense, proved by impairment of normal faculties or an unlawful blood-alcohol or breath-alcohol level of 0.08 or above. If arrested for DUI, an individual faces penalties such as a night in jail, stiff fines, loss of state driver’s license, loss of base driving privilege, increased insurance rates, legal fees, Uniform Code of Military Justice action if military, as well as the shame and embarrassment that comes with a DUI arrest.

Killing or injuring someone else while driving under the influence carries even harsher penalties including a felony conviction, stiffer fines and a jail sentence.

Consider the following factors:

  • It takes much less alcohol to be legally intoxicated than most people realize. The rate at which a person reaches the legal blood-alcohol limit is affected by many factors, to include the amount of alcohol in a particular drink, what the alcohol is mixed with, the rate at which drinks are consumed, gender, body weight, what a person eats or drinks before or during alcohol consumption, and an individual’s liver functions.
  • Most people have heard of the one-drink-per-hour rule as a guide to responsible drinking. However, this rule has some inherent problems because it generalizes that people respond to alcohol in the same manner. They don’t.
  • The human liver can metabolize about one-half ounce of pure alcohol each hour. A five-ounce glass of wine, 12 ounces of regular beer, eight ounces of malt liquor, or one-and-a-half ounces of 80-proof liquor each contain about one-half ounce of pure alcohol. However, some mixed drinks are made of mostly alcohol and contain more than the average one-half ounce of pure alcohol.
  • Also, take into account what the alcohol is mixed with. Drinking alcohol mixed with plain water slows the absorption rate by decreasing the concentration of alcohol. Conversely, drinking alcohol with carbonated liquids speeds-up the absorption rate because the carbon dioxide moves the alcohol more rapidly through the stomach to the small intestine where the alcohol is absorbed more quickly into the bloodstream.
  • Alcohol affects behavior. Alcoholic beverages contain ethyl alcohol, which is a central nervous system depressant. Alcohol impairs many functions of the brain, to include judgment, inhibition, vision, motor skills, concentration and reaction time.

The first two brain functions, judgment and inhibition, affect decision-making ability. Impaired by alcohol, people will say and do things they wouldn’t do while sober. Also, people’s concept of time may be altered, which can influence the amount they think they have consumed and over what time period.

When alcohol lowers other brain functions such as vision, motor skills, concentration and reaction time, it further degrades the ability to safely operate a motor vehicle. Some people may think that one second isn’t much. But, factor that one second into the equation when a car is traveling 45 mph or more, and someone pulls-out in front of that car.

Additionally, tolerance to alcohol can play an important role as well. People who have developed a tolerance to alcohol require larger amounts before they feel its effects. This can lead them into a false sense of security because they don’t feel intoxicated when, in reality, they are.

Equally important, even though high-tolerance drinkers feel the effects of alcohol less than low-tolerance drinkers, their reaction time will still be degraded.

Bottom line, it’s known that even small amounts of alcohol affect driving ability. It is a mistake to assume that a driver with a blood alcohol concentration of less than 0.08 percent is not intoxicated, not impaired and not under the influence.

So, if you drink, don’t drive. And, if you drive, don’t drink. After all, is one drink really worth all the potential serious consequences?

To further promote the vital importance of responsible use of alcohol, the National Institutes of Health Rethinking Drinking initiative offers numerous online interactive tools and resources (i.e. BAC calculator; drink-size calculator; cocktail-content calculator; alcohol-spending calculator; alcohol-calorie calculator; drinking-tracker & drinking-analyzer cards; etc.), which are accessible via the following website.

https://www.rethinkingdrinking.niaaa.nih.gov/tools/calculators/Default.aspx

For more information, contact the Hurlburt Field Alcohol and Drug Abuse Prevention and Treatment Program at 850-881-4237. The ADAPT Program provides a wide range of prevention education, outreach, evaluation, counseling and treatment services to active duty military members. The ADAPT Program is located at 130 LeTourneau Circle, building 90311 (i.e., directly behind the Hurlburt Youth Center). Its hours of operation are Monday through Friday, 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. hours.

Family members of active duty personnel should contact TriCare Humana East at 800-444-5445 for information and assistance in obtaining substance use evaluation and treatment services.