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Posted By Debbie S I am currently in the process of putting together a pre christmas poster and need some facts and figures for drink driving i.e. how long it takes an average person to absorb one unit of alcohol etc.
Have been on the road safety website and have ordered a variety of drink driving campaign posters, but really want people to understand the consequences of going out to a Christmas event, drinking heavily and then thinking that they are Ok to drive the following morning.
Have tried a search on the internet for alcohol facts but this is not throwing anything up.
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Posted By stevehaigh The facts are if you drink you can kill so
DONT DRINK & DRIVE
The End
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Posted By Debbie S Obviously yes - I know that, but if you went out on a Saturday night and drank until 1.00 in the morning - how would YOU know when all the alcohol you had consumed had left your system making it legal for you to drive. Sunday Afternoon, Sunday evening, Monday Morning????
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Posted By Raymond Rapp Debbie
As a 'rule of thumb' the average person will lose a half pint of alcohol per hour through natural evaporation. Hence 4 pints consumed will take 8 hours to reach zero alcohol in the body. And before someone adds it - the body does produce a very small amount of natural alcohol.
Ray
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Posted By Glyn Atkinson Unless you buy in some accurate equipment or know where to find a nice policeman who wants their chips cooling, (Blow in the bag, sir ! - You have to be a certain age for that one !), the honest answer is that you are not going to know for certain, it has to be a quantified breath or blood test that would tell you properly.
The facts and figures could be for Mr or Mrs Average, and who are they ?
Metabolism is so varied between people that no list of figures and calculations would be truly effective.
Would you want to really risk it anyway ??
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Posted By safety medic Frustrating I know, when the question is answered by flippancy!
Debbie,
For the (average) person drinking (average strength) alcohol it would take approx 1 hour per unit of alcohol.
Each unit is based on actually quite weak strenght (3.0/3.5% I think), which means a single unit of strong lager (stella etc) would actually take two hours for the liver to process.
Add on whether the person has eaten before, eaten after, individual tolerance to beer, smoking, practice! and the average is'nt so average. But one unit per hour is a good enough starting point.
On my last job we found many people coming to work over the drink drive limit to work on construction site where random testing was in place, they were confined to welfare unit sufficiently sober.
For internet searching try using medical sites, I seem to remember getting some stuff a while ago for similar poster but cant find it now. Sorry!
Also to consider during the xmas period is the binge drinking which has a negative effect on the liver and causes long term damage.
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Posted By stevehaigh Safety Medic,
If you were referring to my answer as flippant then look at all the contrasting advice.I STAND BY MY STATEMENT
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Posted By Pete48 Debbie, by way of some relief to the advice here, why not try this site? But read the disclaimer closely! http://www.crabbsac.org.uk/articles/N005.htmIf you use the approach of informing people about just how long it takes for alcohol levels to drop and thus highlight the potential dangers of the morning after; then make sure you are very clear about the fact that it is only indicative. As others have said it depends on a lot of individually specific circumstances. They are however a useful guide for people who like to drink sensibly but who may get a little carried away with the festive spirit.
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Posted By Stefan Daunt Instead of posters, why not try your local police force? I have them coming in in December to do a drink drive presentation to office staff and engineers, plus speed and mobiles whilst driving. They will talk as long as you wish and it is free.This can have more of an impact than posters, i'm in the TA and had a presentation on Tues that was hard hitting, but a ittle too graphic for the average workforce.
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