Poor mental health, police cuts fueled pandemic spike in impaired-driving deaths
ARLINGTON, Va., July 01, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- A national mental health crisis and reductions in policing may have helped fuel an increase in impaired-driving deaths during the COVID-19 pandemic, while the role of more liberal alcohol policies was unclear, a new study from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety shows.
'These results reinforce the need for a Safe System approach that incorporates multiple measures to combat impaired driving,' IIHS President David Harkey said. 'Sobriety checks and other visible policing efforts can only happen if we have enough officers. We should also boost programs that include treatment for substance abuse and mental health disorders.'
In 2019, prior to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, 28% of passenger-vehicle drivers killed in crashes had a blood alcohol concentration of 0.08% or more, the legal limit in most states. In 2020, as the effects of the pandemic set in, that proportion increased to 30% and remained elevated through 2022.
Increases in self-reported depressive episodes and suicide plans and reductions in full-time law enforcement personnel were both associated with rises in impaired-driver deaths, an IIHS analysis of fatal crashes from 2018-22 showed.
The effects of changes in alcohol policy were mixed. Allowing home delivery of alcohol from bars and restaurants was associated with more impaired-driver deaths, but allowing those establishments to sell to-go drinks was associated with fewer.
At the most basic level, the rise in impaired driving was related to an increase in alcohol consumption, studies conducted by researchers from other organizations have shown. In surveys conducted in May 2020, 60% of U.S. adults reported they had been drinking more with the onset of the pandemic. Sales figures for alcohol also showed a higher volume sold from March 2020 to August 2021 than in the same months in 2017-19.
Mental health factors likely contributed to those increases in consumption. During the pandemic, many Americans struggled with the isolation of lockdown, stress related to lack of child care and lost income, anxiety about health risks, and other issues.
A one-point increase in the percentage of adults reporting a major depressive episode over the past year and a half-point increase in the percentage who reported making suicide plans were associated with 304 and 322 additional impaired-driver deaths per year, respectively, the researchers found.
Meanwhile, there was a reduction in policing around the same time, which may have reduced any hesitation that drinkers had about getting behind the wheel. Concerns about contracting COVID prompted some departments to scale back on traffic stops and other routine work. Various municipalities also reduced police funding after the killing of George Floyd in May 2020, and many departments put less emphasis on proactive enforcement in the months that followed.
An average loss of five full-time law enforcement officers per 100,000 residents nationwide over 2018-22 was associated with an annual increase of about 214 more impaired-driver deaths.
The new alcohol policies had as large an impact, but the two changes moved the needle in opposite directions.
The number of states that allowed bars and restaurants to make home deliveries of alcohol rose from 21 to 37 between January and December of 2020, and the number allowing such establishments to sell alcohol to go increased from 21 states to 45. Home-delivery policies were associated with around 304 additional impaired-driver deaths per year in the states that adopted them. In contrast, for reasons that remain unclear, to-go policies were associated with about 450 fewer deaths per year in states with those rules in place.
For the most part, the mental health indicators, police employment levels and alcohol policies showed similar trends in separate analyses of crash deaths of drivers ages 16-20 and in single-vehicle, nighttime crash deaths of drivers of all ages and drivers ages 16-20. However, the effects of all the variables were much smaller for younger drivers.
'It's notable that the effect of the mental health crisis was more pronounced than the reduction in policing, as the mental health dimension of the impaired-driving problem receives comparatively little attention,' said study author Angela Eichelberger, a senior research scientist at IIHS.
While there have been efforts to bring a mental-health-oriented approach to impaired driving, they are relatively rare. One example is designated DUI courts.
Staffed by prosecutors and judges who specialize in driving-while-intoxicated cases, these special courts have been shown to reduce repeat offenses by incorporating counseling, support groups and mental health programs with intense supervision. The National Treatment Court Resource Center reports that there were 295 DWI courts across the United States as of 2024.
For more information, go to iihs.org
The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) is an independent, nonprofit scientific and educational organization dedicated to reducing deaths, injuries and property damage from motor vehicle crashes through research and evaluation and through education of consumers, policymakers and safety professionals. IIHS is wholly supported by auto insurers.
CONTACT: Joe Young Insurance Institute for Highway Safety 504-641-0491 jyoung@iihs.org
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Forbes
35 minutes ago
- Forbes
5 ChatGPT Hacks To Help Lose 20 Pounds By Labor Day
ChatGPT can provide develop a variety of nutrition, exercise and recovery plans to discuss with a ... More healthcare provider. More than 5 million American adults, approximately 2% of the population, are currently prescribed one of the blockbuster GLP-1 medicines in their efforts to curb being overweight or obese. That represents a 600% increase in use of GLP-1s for weight loss treatment during the past six years, even though those meds were developed to fight diabetes. The latest CDC data finds that more than 40% of adult Americans are obese, with millions of others overweight; yet they lack the diagnosis and physical condition to warrant GLP-1s, they don't like the side effects or can't afford the price of brand name versions. For individuals struggling with their weight, for whom GLPs are not an option, they might consider a GPT instead — meaning an AI large language model such as ChatGPT. ChatGPT Is Not A Doctor But Can Frame A Healthy Discussion It goes without saying that a generative AI model is not a substitute for guidance from a certified healthcare professional, but the prompts below can create plans and frameworks to start a weight loss discussion with an HCP. The following prompts below in italics can be cut-and-pasted directly into a free AI chatbot you use such as ChatGPT, Perplexity, Claude or Gemini. The prompts were crafted using a goal-focused framework that has clear targets that are actionable and can be customized to the unique situation of any user. ChatGPT Hack #1: Protein First Eating Plan Prompt: "Create a daily meal plan that provides 0.8 grams of protein per pound of body weight using only whole foods. Include three meals and one optional snack. Also, provide a weekly grocery list and suggest substitutions for vegetarians. OPTIONAL: I have a dietitian restriction of [insert applicable restriction such as lactose intolerance or gluten-free]Protein reduces hunger. Protein preserves muscle. Protein forces the body to burn more calories just to digest it. This isn't theory as clinical trials keep proving it. Higher protein diets outperform others in head-to-head comparisons when the goal is fat loss without muscle loss. This is especially true when weight training is included. Summer social events make it easy to overeat processed carbs. Defaulting to protein tilts the odds in your favor. Measure your daily protein grams. Track energy. Look for reductions in hunger after meals. The easiest gauge is body composition every two weeks. If weight drops and strength holds steady, the diet works. If you lose scale weight and get weaker, you're losing muscle. Be sure to consult any eating plan first with an HCP or dietitian. ChatGPT Hack #2: Balanced Strength And Cardio Routine Prompt: "Build me a weekly workout schedule that includes two 20-minute strength training sessions and one 30-minute moderate cardio session. I'm a beginner with access to dumbbells and a treadmill [OR 'I'm mostly sedentary and can only use my own body weight for exercises and walking.] Please include rest days and warm-up ideas as well." Discuss ChatGPT's plan with your primary care physician to ensure sure you're healthy enough to engage in regular exercise. The idea behind this prompt is that muscle drives fat loss. Even at rest, it burns more calories than fat. Strength workouts maintain muscle during a calorie deficit. Cardio helps heart health, recovery and stamina. Together, they balance the week. No gym membership needed. No 60-minute routines. Just three time slots. The trade is simple: 70 minutes a week to avoid plateau hell later. Track the weight used each week or repetition of body weight exercises such as air squats. Write it down. Monitor total reps. Be sure to track the speed or distance of your cardio too. Progress means more strength, more endurance or shorter recovery. If all three stall, you're possibly under eating or overtraining — check with your health pro for tips. ChatGPT Hack #3: Understand Intermittent Fasting Prompt: "Design a 16:8 [OPTIONAL 14:10 or 12:12] intermittent fasting schedule that fits a typical 8 pm to 12 noon fasting window. Please provide research regarding the benefits and cautions of daily intermittent fasting. Recommend a two-week meal timing guide, explain how to manage hunger in the mornings and give tips for staying consistent while socializing during the summer months." Fasting has been around for thousands of years but the idea of intermittent fasting each day has recently emerged as a healthful way of life for many. It works by compressing the eating window. A smaller window is supposed to restrict calories consumed. Blood sugar gets a break. Insulin gets a break. The body gets to access stored fat. Done consistently, this can drop fat without complicated meal planning or calorie counting. Measure how often you stick to the window. Three or more days missed in a week means the window is too tight or your meals aren't satisfying enough. Hunger intensity in the morning should fade by week two. Over time, weight should trend down weekly. If it doesn't, your feeding window is too large or protein is too low. As with all of ChatGPT recommendations — check with medical personnel before beginning a fast.


CNN
43 minutes ago
- CNN
US children are much more likely to die than kids in similar countries, study finds
Children's health Chronic diseasesFacebookTweetLink Follow American children's health has declined profoundly over the past few decades, a new study shows, and the issues are so serious that children in the US are dying at a much higher rate than those in similar high-income countries. What's particularly frustrating is that the bulk of the health problems are avoidable, said Dr. Chris Forrest, co-author of the study published Monday in the journal JAMA. There isn't a genetic defect unique to American children and it's not about socioeconomics within the United States, he said: The results were applicable to the total pediatric population. 'I think we all should be disturbed by this,' said Forrest, a professor of pediatrics at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and director of the Applied Clinical Research Center. 'Kids in this country are really suffering.' From 2007 to 2022, children ages 1 to 19 were 1.8 times more likely to die than children in other high-income countries, the study found. The biggest disparities were in deaths from gun violence and traffic accidents; kids in the US were 15 times more likely than their counterparts in other countries to die by firearms and more than twice as likely to die in motor vehicle crashes. But US children are also sicker because of chronic conditions, Forrest said, and that's a newer phenomenon. In the '90s, when he started taking care of children, he said, he hardly ever saw one with a chronic condition. Today, nearly half of children are getting medical care for a chronic health problem, the study says. The researchers, who analyzed hundreds of millions of health records from five nationally representative surveys and electronic health records from 10 pediatric health systems, found that a child in 2023 was 15% to 20% more likely to have a chronic condition than a child in 2011. Asthma was the one chronic condition for which rates improved in the studied time period, but it was an outlier. Rates of mental health problems such as depression, anxiety and loneliness increased, as did rates of autism, behavioral conduct problems, developmental delays, speech language disorders and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorders. Rates of physical issues also increased significantly, including problems with obesity, difficulties with limitations in activity, problems with sleeping and early menstruation. A period before age 12 is associated with immediate health problems including type 2 diabetes, but in the long term, it may also raise the risk of heart and blood pressure problems, studies show. Chronic conditions were the focus of a recent federal government report from the Make America Healthy Again Commission that said chronic disease had made children 'the sickest generation in American history.' That report blamed ultraprocessed food, exposure to chemicals in the environment, pervasive technology use and the overprescription of medicine. The new study doesn't pinpoint what's driving the increase in chronic conditions, but Forrest doesn't believe it's just what's on the MAHA list. Rather, he believes the nation's entire approach toward caring for children needs to change. 'Our kids are being raised in a very toxic environment, and it's not just the chemicals. It's not just the food and the iPhones. It's a much broader. It's much deeper. It's what we call the developmental ecosystem, and it makes it very challenging to change it,' Forrest said. 'That's a hard answer for people who want a pithy message that tells them how to fix the issues. It's about where they're growing up, where they're going to school, they're playing, where their families live, their neighborhoods, and it's not just one population. It's the whole nation that needs help.' In the 1960s, children in the US were dying at about the same rate as in countries with similar incomes, but that started to change in the 1970s. The US now has about 54 excess child deaths per day compared with 18 other wealthy countries. 'This means the same kid born in this country is much more likely to die than if they were born in Germany or Denmark. Why are we allowing this to happen?' Forrest asked. In an editorial that published alongside the study, pediatricians from Virginia and Washington wrote that there's reason to worry the health of US children will continue to fall behind, and political winds are shifting in the wrong direction. 'While the administration's Make America Healthy Again movement is drawing welcome attention to chronic diseases and important root causes such as ultra-processed foods, it is pursuing other policies that will work against the health interests of children,' they wrote, noting massive budget cuts at the US Department of Health and Human Services, including injury prevention, cancelled funding for safe sleep programs, Medicaid reductions, shrinking mental health funding and new initiatives that fuel vaccine hesitancy among parents. The study found that from 2007 to 2022, babies in the US were 1.78 times more likely to die than children in 18 other high-income nations. The biggest disparities in deaths were from prematurity and sudden, unexpected infant death, which is accidental suffocation and strangulation in bed and other deaths from unknown causes. But it's not just children who are at risk, Forrest said. 'Kids are not getting great start in life because women are also suffering in this country.' Maternity deserts, where pregnant people don't have easy access to a doctor, have become a growing problem. According to the March of Dimes, about 35% of counties in the US are maternity deserts, a number likely to grow as states pass stricter abortion laws, driving doctors toward states where it's less complicated to provide care. In 2020-22, there were an excess of over 10,000 preterm births among people living in maternity care deserts or limited-access counties, the group says. Dr. Colleen Kraft, a pediatrician at Children's Hospital Los Angeles who did not work on the research, said the study provides good data on broad problems. 'Nothing here surprises me at all,' said Kraft, former president of the American Academy of Pediatrics, who wasn't involved in the new research. Over 35 years of practice, she has seen the change in her own patients. At the beginning, she treated mostly infectious disease, but vaccines for conditions like meningococcal disease changed that. Now, she fears that anti-vaccine sentiment could erode much of that progress. She also treats a lot more children now for chronic conditions that the community can help prevent, she said. For example, schools could restrict mobile phones so kids interact more, easing problems with loneliness, anxiety and depression. Families can implement a media plan where all devices are plugged into a central location – not a bedroom – so children can get more sleep. Parents can also encourage kids to play outside and engage in more unstructured time to be social and develop their imaginations. 'There are some very common-sense things families can do,' Kraft said. To see major improvement in childhood health in the US, Forrest believes the country will need to undergo a major transformation. In other countries, for example, day care workers are professionals who get paid a living wage, so kids get quality care. Parents also get more time off when they have a child. 'It's time to rethink how we treat kids and how we're supporting families,' Forrest said. 'Children in our nation our like the proverbial canary in the coal mine. When their health is deteriorating, that means the foundation of our nation is also deteriorating.'
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
TEAM Technologies, an Arlington Capital Partners Portfolio Company, Expands Medical Device Manufacturing Capabilities with Acquisition of Duke Empirical, Inc.
WASHINGTON & KNOXVILLE, Tenn., July 07, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Arlington Capital Partners ("Arlington"), a Washington, D.C.-area private investment firm specializing in government regulated industries, today announced that its portfolio company TEAM Technologies ("TEAM Tech"), a leading end-to-end outsourced manufacturer of mission-critical medical devices, has acquired another leader in the sector, Duke Empirical, Inc ("Duke"). Based in Morgan Hill, CA., Duke is a leading designer, developer and manufacturer of advanced medical devices for interventional cardiovascular applications. Duke specializes in the design and manufacture of innovative catheters and minimally invasive delivery systems. TEAM Tech works with blue-chip healthcare customers and medical device OEMs to provide end-to-end outsourced design and manufacturing services for critical medical devices, enabling customers to streamline their supply chains and reduce delivery lead times. With synergistic production capabilities and customer bases, the acquisition of Duke will further complement TEAM's turnkey offering for healthcare and MedTech OEMs, enabling accelerated manufacturing at scale for complex Class II / III medical devices and delivery systems. "Our investment in TEAM Tech reflects Arlington's focus on building businesses that deliver mission critical solutions in complex, regulated end markets. The addition of Duke expands TEAM Tech's ability to serve leading healthcare and MedTech OEMs in the fastest growing segments of the medical device market, while enhancing its capabilities to develop and manufacture highly advanced devices that support the delivery of life saving medical procedures," said Matt Altman, a Managing Partner at Arlington Capital Partners. "When we began our partnership with Arlington, we knew we had an opportunity to accelerate our growth and expand our offerings to best serve our clients," said Marshall White, President and CEO of TEAM Tech. "Duke adds complementary capabilities and greater capacity to our already robust portfolio of full-service medical device manufacturing solutions, and will enable us to provide a greater breadth of complete solutions for our customer partners, who are doing critical, lifesaving work across the healthcare field." "The acquisition of Duke enhances TEAM Tech's capabilities by furthering its expertise in designing and manufacturing advanced interventional cardiovascular products as well as polymer extrusion," said Gordon Auduong, Managing Director at Arlington Capital Partners. "We are excited to partner with the exceptional team at Duke to deliver TEAM Tech's entire portfolio of capabilities to further support our customers' growth." Arlington has an extensive track record of building leading companies in highly regulated industries that are critical to the USA's healthcare infrastructure, government systems and national security. Within healthcare, Arlington focuses on working with businesses that save lives, improve the delivery of products and services and reduce costs for patients and providers. Other notable recent healthcare sector investments the firm has made include Riverpoint Medical, Millstone Medical Outsourcing, Grand River Aseptic Manufacturing, Everest Clinical Research, Afton Scientific and AVS Bio. Houlihan Lokey served as financial advisor and Goodwin Procter LLP served as legal advisor to TEAM Tech and Arlington Capital Partners. About Arlington Capital Partners Arlington Capital Partners is a Washington, D.C.-area private investment firm specializing in government-regulated industries. The firm partners with founders and management teams to build strategically important businesses in the healthcare, government services and technology, and aerospace and defense sectors. Since its inception in 1999, Arlington has invested in over 175 companies and is currently investing out of its $3.8 billion Fund VI. For more information, visit Arlington's website at and follow Arlington on LinkedIn. About TEAM Technologies Headquartered in Knoxville, TN, with facilities throughout the United States and international facilities in Mexico and Singapore, TEAM Technologies is a specialized end-to-end outsourced manufacturer of mission-critical, single-use medical devices. The company has an extensive array of advanced and vertically integrated manufacturing solutions servicing top medical device and pharmaceutical OEMs. With its deep industry experience and reputation for the highest quality standards, TEAM Technologies leverages seamless, turnkey processes and innovation to dramatically simplify and improve its customers' supply chains. For more information, visit About Duke Empirical, Inc. Headquartered in Morgan Hill, CA, Duke Empirical is a leading developer and manufacturer of innovative medical devices focused on advanced catheters and minimally invasive delivery systems. The company specializes in medical device design and development, precision custom extrusion, high performance catheter manufacturing, medical device component assembly, and finished goods assembly and packaging. For more information, visit View source version on Contacts Media Contact Ryan FitzGibbonPro-arlington@ 登入存取你的投資組合