Cargando…

A European study on alcohol and drug use among young drivers: the TEND by Night study design and methodology

BACKGROUND: Young individuals are the age group with the highest risk of car accidents. One of main explanations relies on the use of psychoactive substances (alcohol, illegal and medicinal drugs), which are known to be major risk factors of road accidents, and whose consumption is almost universall...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Siliquini, Roberta, Piat, Simone Chiadò, Alonso, Francisco, Druart, Axel, Kedzia, Marcin, Mollica, Antonio, Siliquini, Valeria, Vankov, Daniel, Villerusa, Anita, Manzoli, Lamberto
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2873581/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20420663
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-10-205
_version_ 1782181372597633024
author Siliquini, Roberta
Piat, Simone Chiadò
Alonso, Francisco
Druart, Axel
Kedzia, Marcin
Mollica, Antonio
Siliquini, Valeria
Vankov, Daniel
Villerusa, Anita
Manzoli, Lamberto
author_facet Siliquini, Roberta
Piat, Simone Chiadò
Alonso, Francisco
Druart, Axel
Kedzia, Marcin
Mollica, Antonio
Siliquini, Valeria
Vankov, Daniel
Villerusa, Anita
Manzoli, Lamberto
author_sort Siliquini, Roberta
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Young individuals are the age group with the highest risk of car accidents. One of main explanations relies on the use of psychoactive substances (alcohol, illegal and medicinal drugs), which are known to be major risk factors of road accidents, and whose consumption is almost universally more common among younger drivers. Although the correlation between psychoactive substances use and decrease in driving performance has been established in controlled experimental or laboratory settings, few studies were conducted in naturalistic circumstances. The TEND by Night project has been designed to evaluate the relationship between driving performance and psychoactive substances assumption in young drivers enrolled at typical places of consumption. METHODS/DESIGN: The TEND by Night project, endorsed by the European Commission, is a multidisciplinary, multi-centric, cross-sectional study conducted in six European countries (Italy, Belgium/Netherlands, Bulgaria, Spain, Poland and Latvia). The study population consists of 5000 young drivers aged 16-34 years, attending recreational sites during weekend nights. The intervention is based on the portal survey technique and includes several steps at the entrance and exit of selected sites, including the administration of semi-structured questionnaires, breath alcohol test, several drug assumption test, and measurement of the reaction time using a driving simulator. The main outcome is the difference in reaction time between the entrance and exit of the recreation site, and its correlation with psychoactive substances use. As a secondary outcome it will be explored the relationship between reaction time difference and the amount of consumption of each substance. All analyses will be multivariate. DISCUSSION: The project methodology should provide some relevant advantages over traditional survey systems. The main strengths of the study include the large and multicentric sample, the objective measurement of substance assumption (which is typically self-reported), the application of a portal survey technique and the simultaneous evaluation of several psychoactive substances.
format Text
id pubmed-2873581
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2010
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-28735812010-05-20 A European study on alcohol and drug use among young drivers: the TEND by Night study design and methodology Siliquini, Roberta Piat, Simone Chiadò Alonso, Francisco Druart, Axel Kedzia, Marcin Mollica, Antonio Siliquini, Valeria Vankov, Daniel Villerusa, Anita Manzoli, Lamberto BMC Public Health Study protocol BACKGROUND: Young individuals are the age group with the highest risk of car accidents. One of main explanations relies on the use of psychoactive substances (alcohol, illegal and medicinal drugs), which are known to be major risk factors of road accidents, and whose consumption is almost universally more common among younger drivers. Although the correlation between psychoactive substances use and decrease in driving performance has been established in controlled experimental or laboratory settings, few studies were conducted in naturalistic circumstances. The TEND by Night project has been designed to evaluate the relationship between driving performance and psychoactive substances assumption in young drivers enrolled at typical places of consumption. METHODS/DESIGN: The TEND by Night project, endorsed by the European Commission, is a multidisciplinary, multi-centric, cross-sectional study conducted in six European countries (Italy, Belgium/Netherlands, Bulgaria, Spain, Poland and Latvia). The study population consists of 5000 young drivers aged 16-34 years, attending recreational sites during weekend nights. The intervention is based on the portal survey technique and includes several steps at the entrance and exit of selected sites, including the administration of semi-structured questionnaires, breath alcohol test, several drug assumption test, and measurement of the reaction time using a driving simulator. The main outcome is the difference in reaction time between the entrance and exit of the recreation site, and its correlation with psychoactive substances use. As a secondary outcome it will be explored the relationship between reaction time difference and the amount of consumption of each substance. All analyses will be multivariate. DISCUSSION: The project methodology should provide some relevant advantages over traditional survey systems. The main strengths of the study include the large and multicentric sample, the objective measurement of substance assumption (which is typically self-reported), the application of a portal survey technique and the simultaneous evaluation of several psychoactive substances. BioMed Central 2010-04-26 /pmc/articles/PMC2873581/ /pubmed/20420663 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-10-205 Text en Copyright ©2010 Siliquini et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Study protocol
Siliquini, Roberta
Piat, Simone Chiadò
Alonso, Francisco
Druart, Axel
Kedzia, Marcin
Mollica, Antonio
Siliquini, Valeria
Vankov, Daniel
Villerusa, Anita
Manzoli, Lamberto
A European study on alcohol and drug use among young drivers: the TEND by Night study design and methodology
title A European study on alcohol and drug use among young drivers: the TEND by Night study design and methodology
title_full A European study on alcohol and drug use among young drivers: the TEND by Night study design and methodology
title_fullStr A European study on alcohol and drug use among young drivers: the TEND by Night study design and methodology
title_full_unstemmed A European study on alcohol and drug use among young drivers: the TEND by Night study design and methodology
title_short A European study on alcohol and drug use among young drivers: the TEND by Night study design and methodology
title_sort european study on alcohol and drug use among young drivers: the tend by night study design and methodology
topic Study protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2873581/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20420663
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-10-205
work_keys_str_mv AT siliquiniroberta aeuropeanstudyonalcoholanddruguseamongyoungdriversthetendbynightstudydesignandmethodology
AT piatsimonechiado aeuropeanstudyonalcoholanddruguseamongyoungdriversthetendbynightstudydesignandmethodology
AT alonsofrancisco aeuropeanstudyonalcoholanddruguseamongyoungdriversthetendbynightstudydesignandmethodology
AT druartaxel aeuropeanstudyonalcoholanddruguseamongyoungdriversthetendbynightstudydesignandmethodology
AT kedziamarcin aeuropeanstudyonalcoholanddruguseamongyoungdriversthetendbynightstudydesignandmethodology
AT mollicaantonio aeuropeanstudyonalcoholanddruguseamongyoungdriversthetendbynightstudydesignandmethodology
AT siliquinivaleria aeuropeanstudyonalcoholanddruguseamongyoungdriversthetendbynightstudydesignandmethodology
AT vankovdaniel aeuropeanstudyonalcoholanddruguseamongyoungdriversthetendbynightstudydesignandmethodology
AT villerusaanita aeuropeanstudyonalcoholanddruguseamongyoungdriversthetendbynightstudydesignandmethodology
AT manzolilamberto aeuropeanstudyonalcoholanddruguseamongyoungdriversthetendbynightstudydesignandmethodology
AT aeuropeanstudyonalcoholanddruguseamongyoungdriversthetendbynightstudydesignandmethodology
AT siliquiniroberta europeanstudyonalcoholanddruguseamongyoungdriversthetendbynightstudydesignandmethodology
AT piatsimonechiado europeanstudyonalcoholanddruguseamongyoungdriversthetendbynightstudydesignandmethodology
AT alonsofrancisco europeanstudyonalcoholanddruguseamongyoungdriversthetendbynightstudydesignandmethodology
AT druartaxel europeanstudyonalcoholanddruguseamongyoungdriversthetendbynightstudydesignandmethodology
AT kedziamarcin europeanstudyonalcoholanddruguseamongyoungdriversthetendbynightstudydesignandmethodology
AT mollicaantonio europeanstudyonalcoholanddruguseamongyoungdriversthetendbynightstudydesignandmethodology
AT siliquinivaleria europeanstudyonalcoholanddruguseamongyoungdriversthetendbynightstudydesignandmethodology
AT vankovdaniel europeanstudyonalcoholanddruguseamongyoungdriversthetendbynightstudydesignandmethodology
AT villerusaanita europeanstudyonalcoholanddruguseamongyoungdriversthetendbynightstudydesignandmethodology
AT manzolilamberto europeanstudyonalcoholanddruguseamongyoungdriversthetendbynightstudydesignandmethodology
AT europeanstudyonalcoholanddruguseamongyoungdriversthetendbynightstudydesignandmethodology