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Alcohol-related road deaths decreasing in Canada


November 21, 2011   by Canadian Underwriter


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Alcohol-related road deaths are decreasing in Canada, according to the Traffic Injury Research Foundation (TIRF).
In Canada, alcohol has been a factor in 30% to 40% of road deaths for the past 15 years. Although the percentage of alcohol-related road deaths in Canada has hovered between 30% and 35% for the past decade, data show the actual number of Canadians who died in traffic crashes involving a drinking driver has declined from 1,296 in 1995 to 714 in 2009, TIRF said.
During the same period in Alberta, alcohol-related driving fatalities fell from 182 to 145.
“So, while the number of persons killed in crashes involving a drinking driver remains unacceptable, the problem is getting smaller,” TIRF reported.


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